Word: thirsting
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...future needs. Under plans announced last year, the Saudis had promised to boost production from 8,000,000 bbl. a day to 20 million by 1980 (U.S. oil production, by contrast, is expected to remain at 12 million bbl. per day). So great is the world's thirst for oil-consumption will more than double during this decade-that a decision by Saudi Arabia to allow only modest expansion might affect economic growth in the West...
...parliament, Ranier Barzel, 48, had to fend off steady criticism from both his Social Democratic Party foes and his colleagues within the alliance of the Christian Democratic Union and Bavaria's Christian Social Union. He has been assailed as an ambitious opportunist with an all too obvious thirst for power and condemned for his irritating, seemingly insincere political style. As one S.D.P. leader put it: "After every 5,000 words, he has to have his oil changed...
...history of mankind shows that governments have an insatiable thirst for power. This desire for power will carry them to tyranny unless it is prevented...
...accents of the Sicily that he left 51 years ago, founded the company in 1946 after a varied career as cab driver, bricklayer, tomato farmer and restaurateur, and he owns 24% of Tropicana's shares. He was one of the first to discover the North's thirst for chilled orange juice shipped from Florida, and has kept the company growing by innovations that have cut the cost of packaging and shipping the juice. In its most recent fiscal year it raised sales 22%, to $105 million, and increased profits by 29%, to $8.8 million...
...rivers feeding the landlocked Caspian and Aral seas have diverted so much water that the sea levels have dropped alarmingly over the past decade-by 10 ft. in the Aral alone. A scientist says that the only way to restore the Caspian Sea and to slake the "colossal thirst" of users along the way, is to turn rivers now flowing north to the Arctic Ocean southward. Some international scientists fear that without the usual supply of easily frozen fresh water reaching the northern seas, the polar icecap will recede-and the consequent melting will flood the world's seacoasts...