ration - significado y definición. Qué es ration
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Qué (quién) es ration - definición

CONTROLLED DISTRIBUTION OF SCARCE RESOURCES, GOODS, OR SERVICES
Ration; Nonprice rationing; Non-price rationing; Ration book; Food rationing; Gas rationing; Rations; Wartime rationing; Rationed; Food ration; Civilian rationing; War rations; War shortage; War rationing; System of rationing; Food Rationing
  • "An eager school boy gets his first experience in using War Ration Book Two. With many parents engaged in war work, children are being taught the facts of point rationing for helping out in family marketing.", 1943
  • A 1918 advertisement urges civilians to preserve their food during World War I.
  • allotments]]
  • [[Tel Aviv]] residents standing in line to buy food rations, 1954
  • Polish milk ration stamp from 1981 to 1983
  • [[First World War]] German government propaganda poster describing rationing with personifications of meat, bread, sugar, butter, milk, and flour, 1916
  • A man at a service station reads about the U.S. gasoline rationing system in an afternoon newspaper; a sign in the background states that no gasoline is available, 1974.
  • Lining up at the Rationing Board Office, [[New Orleans]], 1943
  • [[Romania]]n ration card, 1989
  • Child's ration book, used in Britain during the [[Second World War]]
  • The diary of [[Tanya Savicheva]], a girl of 11, her notes about starvation and deaths of her sister, then grandmother, then brother, then uncle, then another uncle, then mother. The last three notes say "Savichevs died", "Everyone died" and "Only Tanya is left." She died of intestinal [[tuberculosis]] shortly after the siege.
  • United States gasoline ration stamps printed, but not used, during the [[1973 oil crisis]]

Ration         
·vt To supply with rations, as a regiment.
II. Ration ·noun Hence, a certain portion or fixed amount dealt out; an allowance; an Allotment.
III. Ration ·noun A fixed daily allowance of provisions assigned to a soldier in the army, or a sailor in the navy, for his subsistence.
ration         
I
n.
fixed allowance
1) a daily; monthly; weekly ration
2) a food; gasoline (AE), petrol (BE) ration
II
v.
1) to ration strictly
2) (D; tr.) to ration to (we were rationed to ten gallons of gasoline/petrol a month)
ration         
(rations, rationing, rationed)
1.
When there is not enough of something, your ration of it is the amount that you are allowed to have.
The meat ration was down to one pound per person per week...
N-COUNT
2.
When something is rationed by a person or government, you are only allowed to have a limited amount of it, usually because there is not enough of it.
Staples such as bread, rice and tea are already being rationed...
...the decision to ration food...
Motorists will be rationed to thirty litres of petrol a month...
VERB: be V-ed, V n, be V-ed to amount, also V n to amount
3.
Rations are the food which is given to people who do not have enough food or to soldiers.
Aid officials said that the first emergency food rations of wheat and oil were handed out here last month...
N-PLURAL
4.
Your ration of something is the amount of it that you normally have.
...after consuming his ration of junk food and two cigarettes.
N-COUNT: usu N of n
5.
see also rationing

Wikipedia

Rationing

Rationing is the controlled distribution of scarce resources, goods, services, or an artificial restriction of demand. Rationing controls the size of the ration, which is one's allowed portion of the resources being distributed on a particular day or at a particular time. There are many forms of rationing, although rationing by price is most prevalent.: 8–12 

Rationing is often done to keep price below the market-clearing price determined by the process of supply and demand in an unfettered market. Thus, rationing can be complementary to price controls. An example of rationing in the face of rising prices took place in the various countries where there was rationing of gasoline during the 1973 energy crisis.

A reason for setting the price lower than would clear the market may be that there is a shortage, which would drive the market price very high. High prices, especially in the case of necessities, are undesirable with regard to those who cannot afford them. Traditionalist economists argue, however, that high prices act to reduce waste of the scarce resource while also providing incentive to produce more.

Rationing using ration stamps is only one kind of non-price rationing. For example, scarce products can be rationed using queues. This is seen, for example, at amusement parks, where one pays a price to get in and then need not pay any price to go on the rides. Similarly, in the absence of road pricing, access to roads is rationed in a first come, first served queueing process, leading to congestion.

Authorities which introduce rationing often have to deal with the rationed goods being sold illegally on the black market. Despite the fact that rationing systems are sometimes necessary as the only viable option for societies facing severe consumer goods shortages, they are usually extremely unpopular with the general public, as they enforce limits on individual consumption.

Ejemplos de uso de ration
1. "I have a food ration card, but the ration shops are always understocked.
2. Similarly, the ERC has sent '50 ration packets to Charsadda while 200 ration packets (32.1 kg each) to Peshawar.
3. The relief goods dispatched on Monday to NWFP’s affected areas included 750 ration packets (32.1kg each) to Charsadda, 250 ration packets (32.1 kg each) to Nowshera and 500 ration packets (32.1 kg each) to Swat.
4. He started doing it regularly, using his own candy ration.
5. There‘s no greater social power than the power to ration.