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drought
/ draʊt /
noun
a prolonged period of scanty rainfall
a prolonged shortage
Archaic and Scot form: drouth. an archaic or dialect word for thirst
drought
A long period of abnormally low rainfall, lasting up to several years.
Pronunciation Note
Other Word Forms
- droughty adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of drought1
Example Sentences
“We found tremendous growth in the world’s land areas that are experiencing extreme drought,” Famiglietti said.
“The evidence that human-caused climate change is changing heat waves, heavy rainfall events, droughts, hurricanes, and wildfires has grown.”
The most recent earthquake hit Afghanistan when it is reeling under severe drought and what the UN calls an unprecedented crisis of hunger.
The disaster comes as Afghanistan reels from a severe drought, aid cuts and what the World Food Programme describes as an unprecedented hunger crisis.
“The devastating ‘guerras civil’ left much of the territory in drought and famine .
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When To Use
A drought is a long period with no rain or unusually low levels of rain or other precipitation.Because weather and climate are different in different places throughout the world, there is no single definition of what counts as a drought. However, it always refers to a significant period of dry weather. Droughts have many harmful effects, including water shortages, crop failure, and in some cases famine, among other things. The word is often used in the phrase drought conditions, referring to very dry conditions resulting from a lack of rainfall.Drought can also be used in a figurative way to refer to an extended shortage of or long period without something, as in The city has the longest championship drought in all of sports. Example: The drought continued for more than three weeks and wildfires started to appear.
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