25,000 people die every day due to starvation.
4 definitions found

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.44 [gcide]:

Locality \Lo*cal"i*ty\, noun; pl. {Localitiees}. [L. localitas: cf. F. localit['e].]

1. The state, or condition, of belonging to a definite place, or of being contained within definite limits.

It is thought that the soul and angels are devoid of quantity and dimension, and that they have nothing to do with grosser locality. --Glanvill.

2. Position; situation; a place; a spot; esp., a geographical place or situation, as of a mineral or plant.

3. Limitation to a county, district, or place; as, locality of trial. --Blackstone.

4. (Phren.) The perceptive faculty concerned with the ability to remember the relative positions of places.

From WordNet (r) 2.0 [wn]:

locality

noun: a surrounding or nearby region; "the plane crashed in the vicinity of Asheville"; "it is a rugged locality"; "he always blames someone else in the immediate neighborhood"; "I will drop in on you the next time I am in this neck of the woods" [syn: {vicinity}, {neighborhood}, {neighbourhood}, {neck of the woods}]

From Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 [moby-thes]:

50 Moby Thesaurus words for "locality": abode, area, bailiwick, bearings, belt, bench mark, district, domain, emplacement, field, habitat, haunt, hole, home, latitude and longitude, lieu, locale, located, location, locus, native environment, neighborhood, pinpoint, place, placed, placement, point, position, positioned, province, range, region, section, sector, set, site, situate, situation, situs, sphere, spot, stamping ground, stead, territory, tract, vicinage, vicinity, whereabout, whereabouts, zone

From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (27 SEP 03) [foldoc]:

locality

1. In sequential architectures programs tend to access data that has been accessed recently (temporal locality) or that is at an address near recently referenced data (spatial locality). This is the basis for the speed-up obtained with a {cache} memory. 2. In a multi-processor architecture with distributed memory it takes longer to access the memory attached to a different processor. This overhead increases with the number of communicating processors. Thus to efficiently employ many processors on a problem we must increase the proportion of references which are to local memory. (1995-02-28)
  Definitions retrieved from local copies of the freely distributed DICT client/server software and databases. Click here for database copyright information. - KM