noun
the process in which the air pressure in the center of a cyclone rapidly drops, potentially producing hurricane-force winds with very heavy rain or snow.
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Bombogenesis, the 24-hour process in which a cyclone develops hurricane-force winds, is formed from bomb, in the sense of bomb cyclone or weather bomb, and genesis. Bomb ultimately comes from Ancient Greek 莉籀鳥莉棗莽, a booming sound. Though 莉籀鳥莉棗莽 and English boom arent related, they are formed in the same way: by verbally mimicking a loud noise. Bombogenesis was first recorded in English in the early 2000s.
EXAMPLE OF BOMBOGENESIS USED IN A SENTENCE
The skiers hunkered down when they learned that the onset of the bombogenesis was still to come.
noun
an old ragged garment; tattered article of clothing.
Schmatte, an old ragged garment, is an Americanism adapted from Yiddish shmate, rag, from Polish szmata, of the same meaning. Though much of Yiddish vocabulary comes from German, it uses the Hebrew writing system as an alphabet and treats silent Hebrew consonants as vowels. This is how the letters aleph and ayin, which are silent in most varieties of modern Hebrew, make the ah and eh sounds in Yiddish shmate. Schmatte may also appear as shmatte in English; both spellings are equally valid, with the sch- closer to German spelling standards despite its Polish origin. Schmatte was first recorded in English in the late 1960s.
EXAMPLE OF SCHMATTE USED IN A SENTENCE
Take that schmatte off, the grandmother scolded, and put on a proper coat, or youll catch a cold!
noun
a side-channel, especially one that later rejoins the main stream.
Snye, a side-channel, is probably adapted from Canadian French chenail, a variant of standard French chenal. Chenal comes from Latin 釵硃紳櫻梭勳莽, waterpipe, conduit, which may derive from canna, reed, pipe. Canna, in turn, is a borrowing (via Ancient Greek 域獺紳紳硃) of a word of Semitic origin such as Akkadian 梁硃紳贖, reed; related words in modern Semitic languages include Arabic 梁硃紳櫻堯, canal, channel, and Hebrew 梁櫻紳梗堯 cane, reed, stem. In this way, the Semitic source of Latin canna is also the source of English canal, cane, canister, cannoli, cannon, canon, canyon, channel, andfor fashion mavensthe surname Chanel. Snye was first recorded in English in the 1810s.
EXAMPLE OF SNYE USED IN A SENTENCE
The snye joined the main waterway right in front of their cabin, which made for a perfect fishing spot.