In India many people are living with privation of food. [noun]
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Those and similar works were read by working class radicals against a background of social privation, injustice and unrest. [noun]
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Sydney and Charles experienced acute privation and often hunger, and were eventually taken into public care. [noun]
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It was only under canvas, in danger and privation, that he lost the sense of being one too many in the world. [noun]
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These boys see splendor and magnificence around them daily; they know how rich they are in reality, and yet have to suffer from hunger and privation. [noun]
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All these men are ready to face any kind of privation, suffering, or danger rather than consent to do what they regard as wrong. [noun]
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They know that they are in slavery and condemned to privation and darkness to minister to the lusts of the minority who keep them down. [noun]
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A virtue cannot be practiced in all circumstances without self-sacrifice, privation, suffering, and in extreme cases loss of life itself. [noun]
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But human endurance had been exhausted by overmuch suffering and privation. [noun]
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Idolatry was destroyed, slavery abolished, dissolution made room for a more austere morality, and the contempt for wealth was sometimes pushed almost to privation. [noun]
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CHAPTER XII As generally happens, Pierre did not feel the full effects of the physical privation and strain he had suffered as prisoner until after they were over. [noun]
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