destitution+of+sense

  • 101iermðu — f ( e/ a) misery, wretchedness, calamity, distress, disorder, poverty, destitution, penury; in a moral sense, badness; disease; crime; reproach [earm] …

    Old to modern English dictionary

  • 102iermþ — f ( e/ a) misery, wretchedness, calamity, distress, disorder, poverty, destitution, penury; in a moral sense, badness; disease; crime; reproach [earm] …

    Old to modern English dictionary

  • 103lack — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. want, deficiency, shortage, need. v. t. need, require. See insufficiency, poverty.Ant., sufficiency. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [The state of being lacking] Syn. destitution, absence, need, dearth,… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 104loss — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Failure to keep Nouns loss; perdition; forfeiture, forfeit, lapse, detriment, privation, bereavement, deprivation, dispossession, riddance, waste, dissipation, expenditure, leakage; brain drain;… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 105photography —    The postwar euphoria of victory combined with an ongoing austerity of rationing in Britain gave way to a new optismism for the children of what was to become known as the baby boomer years (see baby boom). In its attempts to both rebuild and… …

    Encyclopedia of contemporary British culture

  • 106destitute — [ dɛstɪtju:t] adjective 1》 extremely poor and lacking the means to provide for oneself. 2》 (destitute of) not having. Derivatives destitution noun Origin ME (in the sense deserted, abandoned, empty ): from L. destitut , destituere forsake …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 107destitute — ► ADJECTIVE 1) extremely poor and lacking the means to provide for oneself. 2) (destitute of) not having. DERIVATIVES destitution noun. ORIGIN originally in the sense «deserted, abandoned»: from Latin destituere forsake …

    English terms dictionary

  • 108HUNGARY — HUNGARY, state in S.E. Central Europe. Middle Ages to the Ottoman Conquest Archaeological evidence indicates the existence of Jews in Pannonia and Dacia, who came there in the wake of the Roman legions. Jewish historical tradition, however, only… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism