drought
/draʊt/ (bre, ipa) · /draʊt/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈdrau̇t/ (ame, mw)
drought — noun
1. a long period, from several weeks to years, during which an area receives far le
a long period, from several weeks to years, during which an area receives far less rain than normal, often causing water shortages and serious damage to farming, wildlife, and daily life.
Dahlia's village in Ethiopia suffered through a severe drought that dried up the only river.
collocation: severe drought
The three-year drought forced the government to ban all outdoor watering.
collocation: [number]-year drought
During the long drought, Folake lost half her cattle because no grass remained.
Scientists warned that climate change would make droughts more frequent and more intense.
- dry spell
shorter and less severe than a drought; typically lasting days to a few weeks
- dry period
neutral, less technical term for any stretch of little rain
- water shortage
focuses on the result (not enough water) rather than the cause (lack of rain)
- flood
the opposite extreme — an excess of water rather than a deficit
- wet season
the period of the year when rainfall is abundant
文法句型
drought / a drought / droughts
用法筆記
Drought is both countable and uncountable. Use 'a drought' for a specific event and 'drought' as a general condition. Often modified by adjectives indicating severity (severe, extreme) or duration (prolonged, three-year).
常見錯誤
2. a long period during which there is not enough of something that people need or
a long period during which there is not enough of something that people need or want, such as money, success, new ideas, or goals in a sport.
The local theater suffered a funding drought after the city cut its budget.
collocation: funding drought
After a two-year goal drought, Ignacio finally scored in the championship final.
collocation: goal drought
The creative drought at the design studio ended when a new illustrator joined the team.
The tech industry faced a hiring drought as the economy slowed down.
文法句型
a [noun] drought
用法筆記
In this metaphorical sense, drought is always countable and almost always appears in the pattern 'a [domain] drought' where the first noun names the thing in short supply. Common in sports journalism (goal drought, scoring drought), finance (funding drought), and the arts (creative drought).