different between supercell vs cyclone

supercell

English

Etymology

super- +? cell

Noun

supercell (plural supercells)

  1. A severe thunderstorm with updrafts and downdrafts that are in near balance, allowing the storm to maintain itself for several hours. Supercells often produce large hail, powerful downpours, very strong winds and sometimes tornadoes.
  2. (mineralogy) A repeating unit cell of a crystal that contains several primitive cells.

Translations

Anagrams

  • cupellers

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cyclone

English

Etymology

Coined by Henry Piddington, probably in the 1840s, and based on some term in Ancient Greek. Sources disagree on the date and on which Ancient Greek term, though it had to be something derived from either ?????? (kúklos, circle, wheel) or ?????? (kukló?, go around in a circle, form a circle, encircle), for example the present active participle ?????? (kuklôn). See cycle and wheel.

Pronunciation

  • (US) IPA(key): /?sa?.klo?n/
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?sa?.kl??n/

Noun

cyclone (plural cyclones)

  1. (broad sense) A weather phenomenon consisting of a system of winds rotating around a center of low atmospheric pressure
  2. (narrow sense) Such weather phenomenon occurring in the South Pacific and Indian Ocean
  3. A low pressure system.
  4. (informal) The more or less violent, small-scale circulations such as tornadoes, waterspouts, and dust devils.
  5. A strong wind.
  6. A cyclone separator; the cylindrical vortex tube within such a separator

Quotations

  • For quotations using this term, see Citations:cyclone.

Derived terms

  • anticyclone
  • cyclone cellar
  • cyclone pit

Translations

Verb

cyclone (third-person singular simple present cyclones, present participle cycloning, simple past and past participle cycloned)

  1. This term needs a definition. Please help out and add a definition, then remove the text {{rfdef}}.
    • 1997, D. J. H. Jones, Murder in the New Age
      White dust was cycloning at the bottom of ravines that cut for miles into the red flatness
    • 2015, Robert J. Morgan, Mastering Life Before It's Too Late
      Now, all of a sudden, I had to juggle class schedules with study time and assignment deadlines and work hours. It quickly cycloned into a sort of frantic agitation with all-nighters, near misses, and frenzied nerves.

See also

  • hurricane
  • typhoon
  • polar vortex
  • cyclone on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

French

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ?????? (kuklôn), present active participle of ?????? (kukló?, I encircle), from ?????? (kúklos, circle)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /si.klon/

Noun

cyclone m (plural cyclones)

  1. cyclone (rotating system of winds)

Further reading

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

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