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View synonyms for consumption

consumption

[ kuhn-suhmp-shuhn ]

noun

  1. the act of consuming, as by use, decay, or destruction.

    Synonyms: utilization, depletion, exploitation

  2. the amount consumed:

    the high consumption of gasoline.

  3. Economics. the using up of goods and services having an exchangeable value.
  4. Pathology.
    1. Older Use. tuberculosis of the lungs.
    2. progressive wasting of the body.


consumption

/ kənˈsʌmpʃən /

noun

  1. the act of consuming or the state of being consumed, esp by eating, burning, etc
  2. economics expenditure on goods and services for final personal use
  3. the quantity consumed
  4. pathol a condition characterized by a wasting away of the tissues of the body, esp as seen in tuberculosis of the lungs


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Other Words From

  • noncon·sumption noun
  • over·con·sumption noun
  • precon·sumption noun
  • self-con·sumption noun
  • under·con·sumption noun

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Word History and Origins

Origin of consumption1

First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English consumpcyon, from Middle French, from Latin consūmptiōn-, stem of consūmptiō “employment, use, waste,” from consūmpt(us) “used up” (past participle of consūmere “to use up, waste”; consume ) + -iō -ion

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Word History and Origins

Origin of consumption1

C14: from Latin consumptiō a wasting, from consūmere to consume

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Example Sentences

A wine consumption map of the U.S. is as fallible as that wine map of Europe.

The highest per capita wine consumption in the world is in the Vatican.

But we have a long way to go before we can match the French in individual consumption.

In the video, Brown misspoke slightly on the number of turkeys killed each year for consumption.

Excessive alcohol consumption is a major public health problem in the United States.

To-day men of science are trying to conquer the horrors of cancer and smallpox, and rabies and consumption.

The cost of erection and the consumption of coal are not above one-third of a Boulton and Watt's, to perform the same work.

But speaking broadly, consumption goods, present or future, are the end in sight of the industrial struggle.

Please remember that under socialism the scramble for wealth is limited; no man can own capital, but only consumption goods.

That was "back in the Sixties," when his lapses were as far apart as they were unrivalled in consumption, span, and pyrotechny.

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consummatory behaviourconsumption goods