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View synonyms for hungry

hungry

[huhng-gree]

adjective

hungrier, hungriest 
  1. having a desire, craving, or need for food; feeling hunger.

    Synonyms: ravenous
    Antonyms: satiated
  2. indicating, characteristic of, or characterized by hunger.

    He approached the table with a hungry look.

  3. strongly or eagerly desirous.

  4. lacking needful or desirable elements; not fertile; poor.

    hungry land.

  5. marked by a scarcity of food.

    The depression years were hungry times.

  6. Informal.,  aggressively ambitious or competitive, as from a need to overcome poverty or past defeats.

    a hungry investment firm looking for wealthy clients.



hungry

/ ˈhʌŋɡrɪ /

adjective

  1. desiring food

  2. experiencing pain, weakness, or nausea through lack of food

  3. having a craving, desire, or need (for)

  4. expressing or appearing to express greed, craving, or desire

  5. lacking fertility; poor

  6. informal

    1. greedy; grasping

    2. stingy; mean

  7. (of timber) dry and bare

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Other Word Forms

  • hungriness noun
  • hungrily adverb
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Word History and Origins

Origin of hungry1

First recorded before 950; Middle English, Old English hungrig. See hunger, -y 1
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Synonym Study

Hungry, famished, starved describe a condition resulting from a lack of food. Hungry is a general word, expressing various degrees of eagerness or craving for food: hungry between meals; desperately hungry after a long fast; hungry as a bear. Famished denotes the condition of one reduced to actual suffering from want of food, but sometimes is used lightly or in an exaggerated statement: famished after being lost in a wilderness; simply famished ( hungry ). Starved denotes a condition resulting from long-continued lack or insufficiency of food, and implies enfeeblement, emaciation, or death (originally death from any cause, but now death from lack of food): He looks thin and starved. By the end of the terrible winter, thousands had starved ( to death ). It is also used as a humorous exaggeration: I only had two sandwiches, pie, and some milk, so I'm simply starved ( hungry ).
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

But on this trek he had lost his pack and was at the mercy of the elements ever since, hungry, dehydrated and shivering under a bed of needles.

I’m usually the hungriest really late at night, so I might order something against my better judgment like the hippy vegan ramen from Tatstu.

She said: "I'm still so hungry for more success and I know that's shared by everyone here at the club. I can't wait to get started this season."

From BBC

Television offered a new stage for that same approach, bringing her classroom instincts to millions of viewers hungry to learn.

From Salon

One thing is for certain: you won’t leave the Detroit metro area hungry.

From Salon

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