cyclone

[sahy-klohn] /ˈsaɪ kloʊn/
noun
1.
a large-scale, atmospheric wind-and-pressure system characterized by low pressure at its center and by circular wind motion, counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere, clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere.
2.
(not in technical use) tornado.
3.
Also called cyclone collector, cyclone separator. Machinery. a device for removing small or powdered solids from air, water, or other gases or liquids by centrifugal force.
Origin
term introduced by British meteorologist Henry Piddington (1797-1858) in 1848, perhaps < Greek kyklôn revolving (present participle of kykloûn to revolve, verbal derivative of kýklos; see cycle); apparently confused by Piddington with kýklōma wheel, snake's coil
Related forms
minicyclone, noun
precyclone, noun
Can be confused
Examples from the web for cyclone
  • The cyclone was one of the deadliest storms in recorded history.
  • One day a cyclone comes and twists her house up in the air.
  • The study found that warmer oceans due to global warming are producing more tropical cyclone activity, including hurricanes.
  • cyclone victims waiting for instructions on how to receive aid.
  • Australians team up to help a rare marsupial after a cyclone devastates its habitat.
  • It is also important to realize that a tropical cyclone is not a point on a map.
  • Although the cyclone is a day or two away, the gray, wet day weighs heavily on my eyelids.
  • The big cyclone came first, and tore things to pieces.
  • It never forgives loans, not even after a flood or a cyclone, although it restructures them when necessary.
  • The unaccustomed feels the sensation of being in a panic, in a tempest, in a cyclone.
British Dictionary definitions for cyclone

cyclone

/ˈsaɪkləʊn/
noun
1.
another name for depression (sense 6)
2.
a violent tropical storm; hurricane
Derived Forms
cyclonic (saɪˈklɒnɪk), cyclonical, cyclonal, adjective
cyclonically, adverb
Word Origin
C19: from Greek kuklōn a turning around, from kukloein to revolve, from kuklos wheel

Cyclone

/ˈsaɪkləʊn/
adjective
1.
trademark (Austral & NZ) (of fencing) made of interlaced wire and metal
Word Origin and History for cyclone
n.

1848, coined by British East India Company official Henry Piddington to describe the devastating storm of December 1789 in Coringa, India; irregularly formed from Greek kyklon "moving in a circle, whirling around," present participle of kykloun "move in a circle, whirl," from kyklos "circle" (see cycle (n.)). Applied to tornados from 1856.

cyclone in Science
cyclone
  (sī'klōn')   
  1. A large-scale system of winds that spiral in toward a region of low atmospheric pressure. A cyclone's rotational direction is opposite to that of an anticyclone. In the Northern hemisphere, a cyclone rotates counterclockwise; in the Southern hemisphere, clockwise. Because low-pressure systems generally produce clouds and precipitation, cyclones are often simply referred to as storms. ◇ An extratropical cyclone is one that forms outside the tropics at middle or high latitudes. Extratropical cyclones usually have an organized front and migrate eastward with the prevailing westerly winds of those latitudes. ◇ A tropical cyclone forms over warm tropical waters and is generally smaller than an extratropical cyclone. Such a system is characterized by a warm, well-defined core and can range in intensity from a tropical depression to a hurricane. Compare anticyclone.

  2. A small-scale, violently rotating windstorm, such as a tornado or waterspout. Not in scientific use.


Our Living Language  : Technically, a cyclone is nothing more than a region of low pressure around which air flows in an inward spiral. In the Northern Hemisphere the air moves counterclockwise around the low-pressure center, and in the Southern Hemisphere the air travels clockwise. Meteorologists also refer to tropical cyclones, which are cyclonic low-pressure systems that develop over warm water. For a tropical cyclone to originate, a large area of ocean must have a surface temperature greater than 27 degrees Celsius (80.6 degrees Fahrenheit). Tropical cyclones are categorized based on the strength of their sustained surface winds. They may begin as a tropical depression, with winds less than 39 miles (63 kilometers) per hour. Tropical storms are identified and tracked once the winds exceed this speed. Severe tropical cyclones, with winds of 74 miles (119 kilometers) per hour or greater, are better known as hurricanes when they occur in the Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico, or as typhoons when they happen in the Pacific Ocean. Because the word cyclone broadly defines a kind of air flow, cyclones are not confined to our planet. In 1999 the Hubble Space Telescope photographed a cyclone more than 1,610 kilometers (1,000 miles) across in the northern polar regions of Mars.
cyclone in Culture

cyclone definition


Any circular wind motion. A region of low atmospheric pressure. Also, a tropical storm.

Note: Cyclones can be a few feet across (“dust devils”) or can be major storm systems such as hurricanes, tornadoes, and typhoons.
Note: These winds move counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere. (See Coriolis effect.)