How to Use starve to death in a Sentence

starve to death

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  • So the manatees have to make that choice to stay warm or starve to death in that process.
    Amy Green, orlandosentinel.com, 10 Nov. 2021
  • Millions of people in the Tigray region remain cut off from the world, and some have begun to starve to death.
    BostonGlobe.com, 18 Aug. 2021
  • But Malama didn’t starve to death or get eaten by a predator.
    Jonathan Edwards, Washington Post, 8 June 2023
  • Millions of Afghans do not have enough to eat, and a million children could starve to death this winter.
    New York Times, 30 Dec. 2021
  • Climate change, supply chain chaos, and now this war — in six months’ time, poor people will starve to death.
    Washington Post, 7 Apr. 2022
  • Hunger pangs come from our brains, wired to crave nourishment so our bodies don’t starve to death.
    Lizz Schumer, Good Housekeeping, 10 June 2021
  • Except Biden made the charge even more lurid by alleging that Trump had let children starve to death.
    The Editors, National Review, 25 Mar. 2021
  • The bacteria break down the walls of the stomach and intestines, so an elk can starve to death with a belly full of alfalfa.
    oregonlive, 29 Jan. 2022
  • For the past year, the plight of manatees has been high on the commission’s agenda, as loss of seagrass to pollution caused a record number to starve to death.
    David Fleshler, Sun Sentinel, 15 Apr. 2022
  • The unanswered question remains however, what is causing these seabirds to starve to death?
    Davis Hovey, Anchorage Daily News, 31 Aug. 2021
  • Without enough light, plants draw on sugar reserves to meet survival needs and can slowly starve to death, Pennisi says.
    Leslie Nemo, Discover Magazine, 21 Aug. 2020
  • Some starve to death after being abandoned by smugglers.
    Ray Sanchez, CNN, 6 Mar. 2021
  • In the 1970s, the world will undergo famines — hundreds of millions of people are going to starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now.
    Kevin D. Williamson, National Review, 17 Mar. 2022
  • The stress from high temperatures can cause coral to expel its algae and slowly starve to death, which leads it to become a ghostly white.
    Victoria Sayo Turner, Smithsonian Magazine, 18 July 2023
  • Unable to move for four days and determined not to starve to death, the teenager survived by drinking his own urine, according to news agencies.
    Ziad Jaber, NBC News, 10 Feb. 2023
  • Some even starve to death because their digestive systems become blocked.
    Delger Erdenesanaa, BostonGlobe.com, 7 Aug. 2023
  • As a result, bats that use up their winter stores before spring either starve to death or leave their caves early in what becomes a vain search for food in the unwelcoming, bug-less cold.
    Geoffrey Giller, Discover Magazine, 21 July 2018
  • Realizing she's been left to starve to death, the rage comes, followed by the tears, followed by hallucinations of birds and flickering lights and her daughter's voice.
    Sara Netzley, EW.com, 9 Mar. 2023
  • Animals that fill their guts with plastics eventually starve to death.
    Elizabeth Kolbert, The New Yorker, 26 June 2023
  • As a result, some elderly people chose to starve to death in hopes that whatever meager supplies were thereby saved would allow younger people to live.
    Melissa Chadburn, The New York Review of Books, 27 Aug. 2020
  • The corals appear white after ejecting their colorful partners and ultimately can starve to death.
    Washington Post, 7 Nov. 2021
  • Colonists drove scores of people into the nearby Kalahari Desert, where they were left to starve to death; German troops also constructed concentration camps where survivors were forced into enslaved labor and often died of exhaustion.
    Nora McGreevy, Smithsonian Magazine, 4 June 2021
  • Without an ample seagrass supply, manatees can become malnourished and eventually starve to death.
    Scottie Andrew, CNN, 12 July 2021

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'starve to death.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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