sufficiency
21sufficiency — suf|fi|cien|cy [ sə fıʃnsi ] noun uncount VERY FORMAL the condition of being or having enough a. singular a quantity that is enough to be effective …
22sufficiency — suf·fi·cien·cy || sÉ™ fɪʃnsɪ n. quality of being sufficient; quantity which is sufficient to the needs of, adequate amount …
23sufficiency — n 1. adequacy, adequateness, suffi cientness; enough, no less, no more and no less; satisfaction, satisfactoriness, acceptability, tolerableness, contentment; completeness, thoroughness, extensiveness. 2. plenty, amplitude, abundance, copiousness …
24sufficiency — suf·fi·cien·cy …
25sufficiency — suf•fi•cien•cy [[t]səˈfɪʃ ən si[/t]] n. pl. cies 1) the state or fact of being sufficient; adequacy 2) a sufficient number or amount; enough 3) adequate provision or supply, esp. of wealth • Etymology: 1485–95 …
26sufficiency — /səˈfɪʃənsi/ (say suh fishuhnsee) noun (plural sufficiencies) 1. the state or fact of being sufficient; adequacy. 2. a sufficient number or amount; enough. 3. adequate provision or supply, especially of wealth …
27sufficiency — n. (pl. ies) 1 (often foll. by of) an adequate amount or adequate resources. 2 archaic being sufficient; ability; efficiency. Etymology: LL sufficientia (as SUFFICIENT) …
28sufficiency test — examination to see if behavior is enough to cause a result …
29Self-sufficiency — refers to the state of not requiring any outside aid, support, or interaction, for survival; it is therefore a type of personal or collective . On a large scale, a totally self sufficient economy that does not trade with the outside world is… …
30Eco-sufficiency — requires a reduction of the level of production/consumption in those parts of the world with the highest standards of living beyond reducing the use of natural resources as well as waste and emissions per unit of production/consumption… …