cumulus

/ˈkjuː.mjə.ləs/

KJUː · mjə · ləs (3 syllables)

English Noun
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Definition

A large white, puffy cloud that develops through convection.

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin cumulus. Doublet of comble.

Example Sentences

  • "In the sketch (which is taken about 75 Jovian days after that of the 2nd July) there is shown a dark copper-coloured streak along the southern margin of the south brown belt, butting on to a bluff-headed streak of cumulus cloud which may be the same remarkable bluff head noticed on July 2."
  • "There were some new cumuli in the east, out above the water, and they began to take the late afternoon sun."
  • "2007 September 1, "Who’s afraid of Google?: The world’s internet superpower faces testing times", in The Economist, The Economist Newspaper Ltd, ISSN 0013-0613, volume 384, number 8544, page 9, Ironically, there is something rather cloudlike about the multiple complaints surrounding Google. The issues are best parted into two cumuli: a set of “public” arguments about how to regulate Google; and a set of “private” ones for Google’s managers, to do with the strategy the firm needs to get through the coming storm."
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