Examples of using Drought in English and their translations into Urdu
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Ecclesiastic
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Colloquial
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Water for drought relief to distress their governments try, it is, but I noticed that the citizens are very good effort.
Drought in the desert has led to the death of more than 3,000 children in the past three years, although authorities have admitted only 828 deaths.
Despite the first rains in September, the drought emergency continues to Lake Bracciano, in the province of Rome.
29,000,000 hectares(110,000 sq mi). In 1998, however, drought reduced capacity to only 2.98 million hectares.
Technological advances wouldn't protect US agriculture from a drought on the scale of the legendary Dust Bowl crisis of the 1930s, research shows.
Water usage is a topic on the mind of many homeowners these days, especially with water shortages in drought areas becoming more and more common.
Imagine one policy maker, I will call her Anna, who is facing a drought and must decide whether to hire a shaman to do a rain dance to increase the chance of rain.
Large areas of the West are contending with moderate to severe drought, while California is now in the fifth year of one of the most extreme droughts in its history.
And the LORD shall guide thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought, and make fat thy bones: and thou shalt be like a watered garden,
Over those two decades, 56 percent of deaths were caused by earthquakes and tsunamis, with the rest due to floods, storms, extreme temperatures, drought, landslides and wildfires.
One reason for this is the ackee tree is particularly hardy- and can currently cope well with extreme weather such as drought and hurricanes, she tells Carbon Brief.
City fringe foodbowls present a unique opportunity to reduce the vulnerability of food production to drought, because they are close to sources of recycled water from city water treatment plants.
Dr Marchant says one way of trying to tackle the drought and famine conditions is to move away from drought-sensitive crops such as maize- introduced into East Africa in the 17th century- and instead plant indigenous, hardier crops, such as sorghum and cassava.
According to Gina McCarthy, a former head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency now at Harvard University's public health school, California's recent wildfires, spurred by drought, have cost more than 80 lives and polluted air as far east as Massachusetts.
to provide food assistance, health and nutrition care, clean water, sanitation, and shelter to those whose lives are threatened by drought and conflict.
Conflict in many areas, changes in land use and an abandonment of traditional farming practices are all factors contributing to the suffering of millions of people facing drought and famine.
Cities are huge contributors to climate change, responsible for about 70 per cent of all greenhouse gas emissions and yet they are also at the frontline of the impacts of floods, extreme heat and drought.
Basically, ackee in Jamaica has not been affected by climate change as the majority are not produced in orchards but in backyards. The trees do not succumb to long periods of drought and, within a few sessions of rainfall, respond by producing fruit. Hurricanes also do nothing more than prune the trees.”.
A lack of water for food production could lead to rising food prices, as was seen during Australia's Millennium Drought. Between 2005 and 2007 food prices increased at twice the rate of the Consumer Price Index. Fruit and vegetable prices increased by 33-43%.
dropping in some areas by two metres a year and has fallen to 100 metres deep in some place due to prolonged drought.