poverty-ridden

English

Etymology

poverty + ridden

Adjective

poverty-ridden (comparative more poverty-ridden, superlative most poverty-ridden)

  1. (of a community, place, etc.) Filled with or plagued by poverty.
    • 1901, Kate Douglas Wiggin, Penelope’s Irish Experiences, Part 5, Chapter 26,
      Fresh from the poverty-ridden hillsides of Connaught, these rich grazing-lands, comfortable houses, magnificent demesnes and castles, are unspeakably grateful to the eye and healing to the spirit.
    • 1963, John F. Kennedy, Speech given at the University of San José, Costa Rica, 20 March, 1963, in Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: John F. Kennedy, Washington: United States Government Printing Office, 1964, p. 272,
      One program after another brought an end to tenant farming in the United States, electrified nearly every farm in our country, transformed the poverty ridden Tennessee Valley into one of the richest agricultural and industrial areas in the United States.
  2. (of a person) Suffering from poverty.
    • 1918, Upton Sinclair, The Profits of Religion: An Essay in Economic Interpretation, Pasadena, Book Five, p. 229,
      [] a young girl is sent to prison and forcibly fed with a tube through the nose for telling poverty-ridden slum-women how to keep from becoming pregnant!
    • 1933, Robert E. Howard, “The Cairn on the Headland” in Strange Tales, Volume 3, Number 1, January 1933,
      I was a poverty-ridden student striving for life in a system which makes the very existence of a scholar precarious.
  3. ( of a time) During which one suffers or has suffered from poverty.
    • 1915, Cecily Sidgwick (as “Mrs. Alfred Sidgwick”), Mr. Broom and His Brother, London: Chapman & Hall, Chapter 7, p. 33,
      Friends soon tell each other their troubles, and she found that Carry’s haunting fear was of a poverty-ridden old age.
    • 1987, Martin Tolchin and Jeff Gerth, “The Contradictions of Bob Dole,” New York Times, 8 November, 1987,
      The White House would be the culmination of a quest for power that contrasts with the powerlessness of his poverty-ridden early years and the helplessness that followed the war wound.

Synonyms

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