scarcity
/ˈskeəsəti/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈskersəti/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈsker-sə-tē -stē/ (ame, mw)
scarcity — noun
1. a condition in which the amount of something available is much smaller than the
a condition in which the amount of something available is much smaller than the amount that people need or want
During the drought, the region faced a severe scarcity of clean drinking water.
collocation: scarcity of + resource
The scarcity of affordable housing has forced many families to move to cheaper areas.
Economists often study how scarcity of resources affects the prices of goods and services.
When the floods hit, the scarcity of clean water became a critical problem for everyone.
Although the region is rich in oil, it suffers from a scarcity of fresh water.
- shortage
more common in everyday language; interchangeable in most contexts
- lack
broader meaning, covers both concrete and abstract absence
- dearth
more formal and literary, often with a dramatic tone
- insufficiency
formal and technical, often used in academic or official writing
文法句型
scarcity of + noun phrase
用法筆記
Typically followed by of to specify the thing in short supply. Usually uncountable, but may appear as a countable noun in formal contexts referring to multiple instances (e.g., scarcities of different minerals).
常見錯誤
❗ 'There is a scarcity clean water.' ✅ 'There is a scarcity of clean water.' — The noun scarcity requires the preposition 'of' before the thing that is in short supply.