starve

  • 81Robert D. Kaplan — (born 1953) is an American journalist, currently an editor for the Atlantic Monthly . His writings have also been featured in The Washington Post , The New York Times , The New Republic , The National Interest , and The Wall Street Journal ,… …

    Wikipedia

  • 82Wa-Tor — Wator ist der Name für eine diskrete Simulation für die Modellierung eines einfachen Räuber Beute Modells. Es wurde gemeinsam von Alexander K. Dewdney und David Wiseman entworfen und 1984 in der Dezemberausgabe der Zeitschrift Scientific American …

    Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 83Wator — ist der Name für eine diskrete Simulation für die Modellierung eines einfachen Räuber Beute Modells. Es wurde gemeinsam von Alexander K. Dewdney und David Wiseman entworfen und 1984 in der Dezemberausgabe der Zeitschrift Scientific American… …

    Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 84famish — /fam ish/, v.t., v.i. Archaic. 1. to suffer or cause to suffer extreme hunger; starve. 2. to starve to death. [1350 1400; ME famisshe, equiv. to famen to starve ( < AF, MF afamer < VL *affamare, equiv. to L af AF + famare, deriv. of fames hunger) …

    Universalium

  • 85logistics — /loh jis tiks, leuh /, n. (used with a sing. or pl. v.) 1. the branch of military science and operations dealing with the procurement, supply, and maintenance of equipment, with the movement, evacuation, and hospitalization of personnel, with the …

    Universalium

  • 86Chattanooga Campaign — Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant and Gen. Braxton Bragg, commanding generals of the Chattanooga Campaign …

    Wikipedia

  • 87Other Losses — Other Losses: An Investigation into the Mass Deaths of German Prisoners at the Hands of the French and Americans after World War II &#160; Author(s) …

    Wikipedia

  • 88fast — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. i. starve, diet, abstain. See asceticism. adj. swift, speedy, fleet, quick, rapid; secure, firm, permanent, steadfast, profound; wild, rakish, dissipated. See velocity, junction, impurity, tenacity,&#8230; …

    English dictionary for students

  • 89swelter — c.1400, frequentative of swelten be faint (especially with heat), late 14c., from O.E. sweltan to die, from P.Gmc. *swel (Cf. O.S. sweltan to die, O.N. svelta to put to death, starve, Goth. sviltan to die ), originally to burn slowly, hence to be …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 90Hunger Plan —    One of the objectives of Nazi Germany, following the invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, was to reduce the Slavic population by 30 million. On 1 November 1941, Hermann Goering told Italian Foreign Minister Galeazzo Ciano, “This year,&#8230; …

    Historical dictionary of the Holocaust