Drought= lack of water
Wildfire= massive fires
Nothing
Drought and intense dryness of available vegetation.
They are synonymous to each other. You can use both words in different sentences for they have only one meaning.
a drought is a water shortage but, a heatwave is a prolong period of prolong of abnormally hot weather
they are different because if its big its a really bad 1 if its small its a not so bad one
A drought is a prolonged period of dryness. It's a time when an area sees very little or no rain. A blizzard is a severe winter storm in which many inches of snow falls on an area.
1:Famine means a severe shortage of food (as through crop failure) resulting in violent hunger and starvation and death,while drought means a shortage of rainfall.
There is no difference. Both are fires that can be started deliberately (arson), or naturally (lightning strike). Either way, both can burn out of control, causing total damage to forests, property and death.
I had the same issue. I had to pick between the admire and the wildfire. After a lot of looking and comparing the pros and cons the wildfire won. Although the admire is a good phone the wildfire better suited me. So it depends on how you feel. A lot of people agreed hands down that the wildfire is better. The admire got 2.5 stars and the wildfire got 3.5 stars.
They are opposites to each other. A drought is no water, but a flood is too much.
I'm not sure, but I think it may have to do with a lack of rain or something like that.
A period of less rain than normal in an area is called a drought. Droughts can have significant impacts on agriculture, water supplies, and ecosystems, leading to crop failures, water shortages, and increased wildfire risks.