Starvation vs Deficiency - What's the difference?
starvation | deficiency |
a condition of severe suffering due to a lack of nutrition.
* 1918 , (Edgar Rice Burroughs), Chapter IV
(uncountable) Inadequacy or incompleteness.
* {{quote-book, year=1963, author=(Margery Allingham), title=(The China Governess)
, chapter=17 (countable) An insufficiency, especially of something essential to health.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-08-31, volume=408, issue=8851, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= (geometry) The amount by which the number of double points on a curve is short of the maximum for curves of the same degree.
(geometry) The codimension of a linear system in the corresponding complete linear system.
As nouns the difference between starvation and deficiency
is that starvation is a condition of severe suffering due to a lack of nutrition while deficiency is (uncountable) inadequacy or incompleteness.starvation
English
(wikipedia starvation)Noun
- "We haven't one chance for life in a hundred thousand if we don't find food and water upon Caprona. This water coming out of the cliff is not salt; but neither is it fit to drink, though each of us has drunk. It is fair to assume that inland the river is fed by pure streams, that there are fruits and herbs and game. Shall we lie out here and die of thirst and starvation with a land of plenty possibly only a few hundred yards away? We have the means for navigating a subterranean river. Are we too cowardly to utilize this means?"
deficiency
English
Noun
citation, passage=The face which emerged was not reassuring. […]. He was not a mongol but there was a deficiency of a sort there, and it was not made more pretty by a latter-day hair cut which involved eccentrically long elf-locks and oiled black curls.}}
Promotion and self-promotion, passage=One of academia’s deficiencies is that, though its lecture halls and graduate schools are replete with women, its higher echelons are not. Often, this is seen as a phenomenon specific to the sciences. … In fact, the disparity applies to the whole grove. Another report from 2006, by the American Association of University Professors, found the same ratio in the faculties of arts, humanities and social science, too.}}