Citations:megadisaster

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English citations of megadisaster

Noun: "an unexpected natural or man-made catastrophe of exceptional magnitude and/or causing unusually severe or unprecedented damage"[edit]

1983 1986 2007 2009 2010 2012
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1983 — Witold Rybczynski, Taming the Tiger: The Struggle to Control Technology, Viking Press (1983), →ISBN:
    Another ecological megadisaster may occur in Brazil, where, some scientists believe, the large-scale lumber industry could denude the jungle to the point that the reduction in vegetation, and hence in oxygen production, will affect the biosphere on a global scale.
  • 1986 — Beverley Raphael, When Disaster Strikes: How Individuals and Communities Cope with Catastrophe, Basic Books (1986), →ISBN, page 308:
    The threat of nuclear war poses megadisaster to the city communities of the world directly and to all ecology.
  • 2007 — Bob Drury, "The Battle For Your Health", Men's Health, April 2007:
    He describes how the next megadisaster — a Seattle earthquake, a tidal wave inundating New York City — will set the nation reeling.
  • 2009 — Richard Ben-Veniste, The Emperor's New Clothes: Exposing the Truth from Watergate to 9/11, Thomas Dunne Books (2009), →ISBN, page 309:
    On the one hand, the families were out in force, demanding answers from the former city officials whom they felt had contributed to the loss of life on 9/11 by not preparing adequately for the megadisaster that claimed the lives of their loved ones.
  • 2010 — Jay M. Feinman, Delay, Deny, Defend: Why Insurance Companies Don't Pay Claims and What You Can Do About It, Portfolio (2010), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
    James W. Greer, president of the Association of Property and Casualty Claims Professionals, lamented, "It was as if some small group of high-level financial magnates decided that the only way to save the industry's financial fate from this megadisaster [Hurricane Katrina] was to take a total hands-off approach and hide beneath the waves and the flood exclusion."
  • 2010 — Sisira Jayasuriya & Peter McCawley (with Bhanupong Nidhiprabha, Budy P. Resosudarmo, & Dushni Weerakoon), The Asian Tsunami: Aid and Reconstruction After a Disaster, Edgar Elgar Publishing Limited (2010), →ISBN, page 12:
    The response to a megadisaster such as the 2004 Asian tsunami raises many issues.
  • 2012 — Daniel P. Aldrich, Building Resilience: Social Capital in Post-Disaster Recovery, University of Chicago Press (2012), →ISBN, page 75:
    This chapter uses case studies along with a new data set focused on Kobe's nine wards after the city's 1995 megadisaster, the earthquake known in Japanese as the Hanshin Awaji Daishinsai (the Great Hanshin—Awaji Earthquake), []

Noun: "an unforeseen event of any kind with exceptionally unpleasant, distressing, or unfortunate results"[edit]

1991 1994 2009
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1991 — Shana Alexander, When She Was Bad: The Story of Bess, Hortense, Sukhreet & Nancy, Dell Books (1991), →ISBN, page 16:
    Myerson's great happiness was followed by megadisaster. In 1987 her lover was convicted of tax fraud.
  • 1994 — Lael Littke, The Bridesmaids' Dress Disaster, Deseret Book Co. (1994), →ISBN, page 90:
    This was a total, out-and-out, megadisaster, and her numb brain couldn't think of a thing she could do about it. Except sew the dress.
  • 2009 — Andrew Attaway, Daily Guideposts 2009: A Spirit-Lifting Devotional, Guideposts (2008), →ISBN, page 311:
    After the initial shock of discovering my scheduling megadisaster, I forced myself to take a deep breath.