starve

بھوکا
definition
verb
she left her animals to starve
(of a person or animal) suffer severely or die from hunger.
pull down that window for we are perfectly starving here
be freezing cold.
translation of 'starve'
verb
بهوکا مارنا
example
she left her animals to 'starve'
German U-boats hoping to 'starve' Britain into submission
German U-boats hoping to 'starve' Britain into submission
Sure, you deal crack on the side, you beat your wife, you 'starve' your kids, but you're straight and you go to church, so we're here to save you.
Since you, his loving owner, have the power to either feed or 'starve' your pet, your dog looks to you as its only supplier of food.
she left her animals to 'starve'
If it is wrong to whip a dog or 'starve' a horse or bait bears for sport or grossly abuse farm animals, it is wrong for all people in every place.
The primary objective of this campaign is to 'starve' terrorists of essential funding and technical support…
It sounds, through the distribution of land and the distribution of food, like the government is trying to hold on to control and 'starve' its enemies into submission.
But we could 'starve' the beast to death by ceasing to provide its main source of food: our money.
I cannot trust a man who will 'starve' children to death and think nothing of it.
Then we have the so called pet lovers who 'starve' the family pet dog till his skeletal bone structure protrudes through its limp flesh.
Vets estimated the dog, which had ripped the house apart in its frantic search for food, 'starved' to death over eight weeks.
But it was the Indian scholars themselves making the fuss, expressing concern that research institutes back in Bharat were and are 'being starved of' much-needed funds.
Dundee specialised in garrotting and Aberdeen used 'starvation' - it was cheaper.
Again, we could have blockaded and 'starved them out' but that was not necessary.
Aid agencies have rightly pointed out that many of the randomly dropped packages would have got lost, many would be destroyed on impact, and many eaten by people who were not 'starving' .
This explains why a car crash is more likely to be considered an event - and consequently to feature in the news - than the ongoing plight of people 'starving' in Sudan.
She 'starved' to death last year beside her mother's corpse in a Doncaster flat while the case workers who should have been protecting her found other things to do.
While the commission holds more meetings about capturing the narrative of Scottish life (whatever that means), artists are 'being starved of' funds.
He argued that Mayo General Hospital was recognised by the Dept of Health and Children as the most efficient hospital in Europe and yet it was 'being starved of' funds.
What if Germany's U-boats had won the Battle of the Atlantic and 'starved' Britain into submission?
University chiefs have warned that more than 100 arts and science departments are at risk of closure after 'being starved of' research funds, writes Gareth Walsh.
After said party, back at the parents, Andy got really stroppy with me because I wasn't hungry even though he was 'starving' .
They torched all buildings except the food stores so that the Romans could not say 'they were starved out' .
They would not give me a pinch of flour even if I 'starved' to death.
He was known as a skilful printer and darkroom operative, even though his sight was severely damaged after he was 'starved' by his captors in the Second World War.
She wished that when she opened her eyes, there would be a plate of steaming waffles next to her… because she was ravenously 'starving' .
In 1869, a 12-year-old called Sarah Jacob 'starved' to death in a Welsh farmhouse, under the eye of doctors and nurses who were watching her around the clock.
For example, if you 'starved' a dog and chained it in the back yard for 6 months, you would be sentenced to an outdoor cage with as little food as you gave the dog.
Credits: Google Translate