different between cycle vs acyclically

cycle

English

Etymology

From Middle English cicle (fixed length period of years), from Late Latin cyclus, from Ancient Greek ?????? (kúklos, circle), from Proto-Indo-European *k?ék?los (circle, wheel). Doublet of wheel; see there for more.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?sa?k?l/
  • Rhymes: -a?k?l

Noun

cycle (plural cycles)

  1. An interval of space or time in which one set of events or phenomena is completed.
    • 1795, Edmund Burke, Thoughts and Details on Scarcity
      Wages [] bear a full proportion [] to the medium of provision during the last bad cycle of twenty years.
  2. A complete rotation of anything.
  3. A process that returns to its beginning and then repeats itself in the same sequence.
  4. The members of the sequence formed by such a process.
  5. (music) In musical set theory, an interval cycle is the set of pitch classes resulting from repeatedly applying the same interval class to the starting pitch class.
  6. A series of poems, songs or other works of art, typically longer than a trilogy.
  7. A programme on a washing machine, dishwasher, or other such device.
  8. A pedal-powered vehicle, such as a unicycle, bicycle, or tricycle, or a motorized vehicle that has either two or three wheels.
    Hyponyms: motorbike, motorcycle, unicycle, bicycle, tricycle, motortrike
  9. (baseball) A single, a double, a triple, and a home run hit by the same player in the same game.
  10. (graph theory) A closed walk or path, with or without repeated vertices allowed.
  11. (topology, algebraic topology) A chain whose boundary is zero.
  12. An imaginary circle or orbit in the heavens; one of the celestial spheres.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Burke to this entry?)
  13. An age; a long period of time.
    • 1842, Alfred Tennyson, Locksley Hall
      Better fifty years of Europe than a cycle of Cathay.
  14. An orderly list for a given time; a calendar.
  15. (botany) One entire round in a circle or a spire.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Gray to this entry?)
  16. (weaponry) A discharge of a taser.
    • 2014, R.T. Wyant, Thomas Burns, Risk Management of Less Lethal Options, CRC Press (?ISBN), page 211:
      Officers have made the mistake of applying many Taser cycles, expecting the suspect to relent.
  17. (aviation) One take-off and landing of an aircraft, referring to a pressurisation cycle which places stresses on the fuselage.


Usage notes

  • (baseball sense): As in the example sentence, one is usually said to hit for the cycle. However, other uses also occur, such as hit a cycle and complete the cycle.

Derived terms

Related terms

Descendants

  • ? Japanese: ???? (saikuru)

Translations

Verb

cycle (third-person singular simple present cycles, present participle cycling, simple past and past participle cycled)

  1. To ride a bicycle or other cycle.
  2. To go through a cycle or to put through a cycle.
  3. (electronics) To turn power off and back on
    Avoid cycling the device unnecessarily.
  4. (ice hockey) To maintain a team's possession of the puck in the offensive zone by handling and passing the puck in a loop from the boards near the goal up the side boards and passing to back to the boards near the goal
    They have their cycling game going tonight.

Related terms

  • recycle

Translations

Anagrams

  • leccy

French

Etymology

From Middle French, from Late Latin cyclus.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /sikl/

Noun

cycle m (plural cycles)

  1. cycle
  2. (Switzerland) middle school, junior high school

Derived terms

  • cycle de l'eau
  • cycle du carbone

Further reading

  • “cycle” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

Latin

Noun

cycle

  1. vocative singular of cyclus

cycle From the web:

  • what cycle is the moon in
  • what cycle is the catholic church in
  • what cycle is photosynthesis in
  • what cycle day is ovulation
  • what cycle is the basis of our weather
  • what cycle do the light-independent weegy
  • what cycle is the catholic church in 2021
  • what cycle includes ammonia and urea


acyclically

English

Etymology

acyclic +? -ally

Adverb

acyclically (not comparable)

  1. In an acyclic manner; without cycles.

acyclically From the web:

  • what does acyclic mean
  • what is a cyclical stock
  • what does acyclic mean in economics
  • what does acyclical
  • what is acyclical
  • acyclical meaning
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