cloud
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cloud
(kloud)n.
1.
a. A visible body of very fine water droplets or ice particles suspended in the atmosphere at altitudes ranging up to several miles above sea level.
b. A mass of particles or droplets, as of dust, smoke, or steam, suspended in the atmosphere or existing in outer space.
2.
a. A large moving body of things in the air or on the ground; a swarm: a cloud of locusts.
b. A collection of particles or other small entities: an electron cloud; a cloud of spores.
c. An opaque mass of particles suspended in water: a cloud of silt in the pond.
3. A dark region or blemish, as on a polished stone.
4. A state or cause of sadness, worry, or anger: At the bad news a cloud fell over the celebration.
5. A state or cause of confusion or misunderstanding: writing made difficult by a cloud of jargon.
6. A state or cause of suspicion or disgrace: A cloud of mistrust lingers among the signers of the treaty.
7.
a. A large area of coordinated wireless internet service.
b. The collection of data and services available through the internet: stored company data in the cloud.
v. cloud·ed, cloud·ing, clouds
v.tr.
1.
a. To cover or obscure with clouds: We could not see the moon because the sky was clouded over.
b. To make less clear or transparent: Smoke clouded the sky. Steam clouded the windows.
2.
a. To make sorrowful, troubled, or angry: a bad memory that clouded his spirits.
b. To cause to appear sorrowful, troubled, or angry: Worry clouded her face.
3.
a. To make difficult to know or understand; make obscure or uncertain: The economic downturn clouded the future of the project.
b. To confuse: Don't let your resentments cloud your judgment.
4. To cast aspersions on; sully: Scandal clouded the officer's reputation.
v.intr.
Idioms: 1.
a. To become cloudy or overcast: The sky clouded over.
b. To become dark, obscure, or less transparent: The water in the tank clouded up.
2. To show sorrow, worry, or anger: His face clouded at the news.
in the clouds
Impractical.
under a cloud
Under suspicion or in a state of disgrace.
[Middle English, hill, cloud, from Old English clūd, rock, hill.]
cloud′less adj.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
cloud
(klaʊd)n
1. (Physical Geography) a mass of water or ice particles visible in the sky, usually white or grey, from which rain or snow falls when the particles coagulate. See also cirrus, cumulonimbus, cumulus, stratus
2. any collection of particles visible in the air, esp of smoke or dust
3. (Zoology) a large number of insects or other small animals in flight
4. something that darkens, threatens, or carries gloom
5. (Jewellery) jewellery a cloudlike blemish in a transparent stone
6. (modifier) of or relating to cloud computing: a cloud application.
7. in the clouds not in contact with reality
8. under a cloud
a. under reproach or suspicion
b. in a state of gloom or bad temper
9. on cloud nine informal elated; very happy
vb
10. (when: intr, often foll by over or up) to make or become cloudy, overcast, or indistinct
11. (tr) to make obscure; darken
12. (tr) to confuse or impair: emotion clouded his judgment.
13. to make or become gloomy or depressed
14. (tr) to place under or render liable to suspicion or disgrace
15. to render (liquids) milky or dull or (of liquids) to become milky or dull
16. to become or render mottled or variegated
[C13 (in the sense: a mass of vapour): from Old English clūd rock, hill; probably related to clod]
ˈcloudless adj
ˈcloudlessly adv
ˈcloudlessness n
ˈcloudˌlike adj
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
cloud
(klaʊd)n.
1. a visible collection of particles of water or ice suspended in the air, usu. at an elevation above the earth's surface.
2. any similar mass, esp. of smoke or dust.
3. a dim or obscure area in something otherwise clear or transparent.
4. anything that causes gloom, trouble, suspicion, etc.
5. a great number of insects, birds, etc., flying together.
v.t. 6. to cover with or as if with a cloud or clouds.
7. to make gloomy.
8. to make obscure or indistinct; confuse: to cloud the issue with extraneous details.
9. to reveal distress, anxiety, etc., in (a part of one's face): Worry clouded his brow.
10. to place under suspicion, disgrace, etc.
v.i. 11. to grow cloudy.
12. to reveal one's distress, anxiety, etc.: Her brow clouded with anger.
Idioms: 1. have one's head in the clouds,
a. to be lost in reverie; be daydreaming.
b. to be impractical.
2. on a cloud, Informal. exceedingly happy; in high spirits.
3. under a cloud, in disgrace; under suspicion.
[before 900; Middle English; Old English clūd rock, hill; probably akin to clod]
cloud′less, adj.
cloud′less•ly, adv.
cloud′less•ness, n.
cloud′like`, adj.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
cloud
(kloud)1. A visible mass of condensed water droplets or ice particles floating in the atmosphere. Clouds take various shapes depending on the conditions under which they form and their height in the atmosphere, ranging from ground or sea level to several miles above the Earth.
2. A distinguishable mass of particles or gas, such as the collection of gases and dust in a nebula.
The American Heritage® Student Science Dictionary, Second Edition. Copyright © 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
Cloud
a mass or volume of smoke, flying dust, etc.; a body of insects or birds; a mass of rock; a great crowd; a vast collection. See also drift, plague, swarm.Examples: cloud of arrows, 1776; of disdain, 1591; of dust; of flies, 1855; of foxes, 1883; of gnats, 1590; of grasshoppers; of incense; of information, 1705; of insects; of locust, 1667; of rain; of rock; of sails, 1748; of seafowl, 1885; of smoke; of starlings, 1882; of witches; of witnesses, 1382.
Dictionary of Collective Nouns and Group Terms. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Cloud(s)
See Also: CLOUD MOVEMENTS, SKY
- A cloud like a torn shirt —Katherine Mansfield
- Clouds are like Holy Writ, in which theologians cause the faithful or the crazy to see anything they please —Voltaire
- Clouds … as white as leghorn feathers —Saul Bellow
- The cloud showed motion within, like an old transport truck piled high with crate on crate of sleepy white chickens —Eudora Welty
- The clouds hung above the mountains like puffs of white smoke left in the wake of a giant old-fashioned choochoo train —Sue Grafton
- The clouds lie over the chiming sky … like the dustsheets over a piano —Dylan Thomas
- Clouds like a marble frieze across the sky —Helen Hudson
- Clouds like cruisers in the heaven —Edna O’Brien
- Clouds like dark bruises were massing and swelling [on the horizon] —George Garrett
- Clouds … like drowsy lambs around a tree —Romain Gary
- (The sky turned sooty with) clouds like enormous thumbprints —Helen Hudson
- Clouds like lights among great tombs —Wallace Stevens
- Clouds like tattered fur —Jean Thompson
- Clouds piling up like a bubble bath —Sue Grafton
- Clouds, plump and heavy as dumplings —Anthony E. Stockanes
- The clouds were asses’ ears —Dylan Thomas
- The clouds were huddled on the horizon like dirty sheep from the steppes —Joyce Renwick
- The clouds were like an alabaster palace —Johnny Mercer, from his 1954 lyrics for Midnight Sun
- The clouds were like old fiddles —Joyce Cary
- A few clouds were drawn against the light like streaks of lead pencils —John Cheever
- Fluffy white clouds, like flecks of lather, were floating across the sky —Alexander Solzhenitsyn
- Clouds … wild and black and rolling like locomotives —W. P. Kinsella
- Frail clouds like milkweed floss —John Dos Passos
- Gleaming, white fluffy clouds peeped over the hills … like kittens —Stella Benson
- High fat clouds like globs of whipped cream —William Faulkner
- Like a grave face, lit by some last, sad thought, a cloud, tinged by the fading glow of sunset —John Hall Wheelock
- Like blurred lenses, winter clouds cast a shade over the sun —Truman Capote
- (Above the falling sun,) like visible winds the clouds are streaked and spun —Roy Fuller
- Little white clouds … like a row of ballet-girls, dressed in white, waiting at the back of the stage, alert and merry, for the curtain to go up —W. Somerset Maugham
- Little white clouds like flags were whipped out in the scented wind —Paul Horgan
- Little white puffs of cloud … like a cat steeped in milk —W. P. Kinsella
- A long thin cloud crossed it [the moon] slowly, drawing itself out like a name being called —Eudora Welty
- Low clouds, drooping at the edges like felt, sailed over the woods —Boris Pasternak
- Low on the horizon hung a fugitive wisp of cloud, spiraled and upthrust like a genie emerging from a bottle —Robert Traver
- A massive cloud like dirty cotton —William Faulkner
- One cloud intruded [into the blue of the sky] puffy, precise, as if piped from a pastry bag —Margaret Sutherland
- Parcels of clouds lying against the mountainside like ghosts of dead mackerel —Paul Theroux
- A single puff of cloud so still, it seems as if it had been painted there —Delmore Schwartz
- Small thin clouds like puffs of frosty breath —Joyce Cary
- Some small clouds, like rosy petals, seemed to his eyes to be dancing, gently and carefully, against the blue —Hugh Walpole
- They [the clouds] peel the morning like a fruit —Lawrence Durrell
- When clouds appear like rocks and towers, the earth’s refreshed by frequent showers —English weather rhyme
- White and fluffy clouds … one looked like a fish and one looked like a movie star, all curvy, and another looked like Santa Claus gone wrong —Lee Smith
Similes Dictionary, 1st Edition. © 1988 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
cloud
Past participle: clouded
Gerund: clouding
Imperative |
---|
cloud |
cloud |
Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011
cloud
A mass of tiny droplets formed when water vapor condenses as warm, moist air moves upwards where the temperature is lower. The bottom of the cloud is the dew point.
Dictionary of Unfamiliar Words by Diagram Group Copyright © 2008 by Diagram Visual Information Limited
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:
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Noun | 1. | ![]() coma - (astronomy) the luminous cloud of particles surrounding the frozen nucleus of a comet; forms as the comet approaches the sun and is warmed nebula - an immense cloud of gas (mainly hydrogen) and dust in interstellar space physical phenomenon - a natural phenomenon involving the physical properties of matter and energy aerosol - a cloud of solid or liquid particles in a gas cosmic dust - clouds of particles or gases occurring throughout interstellar space dust cloud - a cloud of dust suspended in the air mushroom cloud, mushroom-shaped cloud, mushroom - a large cloud of rubble and dust shaped like a mushroom and rising into the sky after an explosion (especially of a nuclear bomb) |
2. | cloud - a visible mass of water or ice particles suspended at a considerable altitude cirrocumulus, cirrocumulus cloud - a cloud at a high altitude consisting of a series of regularly arranged small clouds resembling ripples cirrostratus, cirrostratus cloud - a thin uniform layer of hazy cloud at high altitude cirrus cloud, cirrus - a wispy white cloud (usually of fine ice crystals) at a high altitude (4 to 8 miles) cloud bank - a layer of clouds seen from a distance condensation trail, contrail - an artificial cloud created by an aircraft; caused either by condensation due to the reduction in air pressure above the wing surface or by water vapor in the engine exhaust cumulonimbus, cumulonimbus cloud, thundercloud - a dark cloud of great vertical extent charged with electricity; associated with thunderstorms cumulus, cumulus cloud - a globular cloud mother-of-pearl cloud, nacreous cloud - a luminous iridescent cloud at a high altitude that may be seen when the sun is a few degrees below the horizon nebule - a small cloud sky - the atmosphere and outer space as viewed from the earth storm cloud - a heavy dark cloud presaging rain or a storm stratus, stratus cloud - a large dark low cloud atmospheric phenomenon - a physical phenomenon associated with the atmosphere water vapor, water vapour - water in a vaporous form diffused in the atmosphere but below boiling temperature | |
3. | cloud - out of touch with reality; "his head was in the clouds" | |
4. | cloud - a cause of worry or gloom or trouble; "the only cloud on the horizon was the possibility of dissent by the French" gloominess, glumness, gloom - an atmosphere of depression and melancholy; "gloom pervaded the office" | |
5. | cloud - suspicion affecting your reputation; "after that mistake he was under a cloud" suspicion - the state of being suspected; "he tried to shield me from suspicion" | |
6. | cloud - a group of many things in the air or on the ground; "a swarm of insects obscured the light"; "clouds of blossoms"; "it discharged a cloud of spores" insect - small air-breathing arthropod infestation, plague - a swarm of insects that attack plants; "a plague of grasshoppers" | |
Verb | 1. | cloud - make overcast or cloudy; "Fall weather often overcasts our beaches" darken - make dark or darker; "darken a room" fog up - get foggy; "The windshield fogged up" haze - become hazy, dull, or cloudy |
2. | ![]() conceal, hide - prevent from being seen or discovered; "Muslim women hide their faces"; "hide the money" overshadow - cast a shadow upon; "The tall tree overshadowed the house" | |
3. | cloud - billow up in the form of a cloud; "The smoke clouded above the houses" | |
4. | cloud - make gloomy or depressed; "Their faces were clouded with sadness" | |
5. | cloud - place under suspicion or cast doubt upon; "sully someone's reputation" | |
6. | cloud - make less clear; "the stroke clouded memories of her youth" | |
7. | cloud - colour with streaks or blotches of different shades spot - mark with a spot or spots so as to allow easy recognition; "spot the areas that one should clearly identify" harlequin - variegate with spots or marks; "His face was harlequined with patches" | |
8. | cloud - make milky or dull; "The chemical clouded the liquid to which it was added" dull - make less lively or vigorous; "Middle age dulled her appetite for travel" |
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
cloud
noun
verb
Related words
fear nephophobia
fear nephophobia
Quotations
"I wander'd lonely as a cloud"
"That floats on high o'er vales and hills" [William Wordsworth I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud]
"I wander'd lonely as a cloud"
"That floats on high o'er vales and hills" [William Wordsworth I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud]
Types of cloud
altocumulus, altostratus, cirrocumulus, cirrostratus, cirrus, cumulonimbus, cumulus, false cirrus, fractocumulus, fractostratus, nimbostratus, nimbus, stratocumulus, stratusCollins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002
cloud
nounverb
1. To make dim or indistinct:
The American Heritage® Roget's Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
Translations
تَتَلَبَّد بالغُيوم، تَكْفَهِرسَحَابَةسِرب منغَيْمَةٌ مِن، كَدَر، كآبهغَيْمَه
oblakmrakzachmuřitzamlženézamračit
skysværmblive overskyetblive sløretformørke
nubo
ähmastamaparvpilvpilvinemaudu
pilvisamentuasumentaasumentuasumu
oblak
elhomályosulelkomorulfelhõfelhőfelleg
áhyggjur, òyngslimökkur, skÿòykkna í loftiskýskÿ
雲霧靄埃湯気
구름
debesisdebesuotasįtariamamliūtismiglotas
mākonissadrūmtaizmiglotapēnotapmākties
mračnooblakzaliať sazastrieť sa mrakmi
oblak
moln
เมฆ
bulutbulutlanmakhüzünlenmekkapla makkederlenmek
mây
cloud
[klaʊd]A. N → nube f (also fig)
a cloud of dust/smoke/gas/insects → una nube de polvo/humo/gases/insectos
to be under a cloud (= under suspicion) → estar bajo sospecha; (= resented) → estar desacreditado
to have one's head in the clouds → estar en las nubes
to be on cloud nine → estar en el séptimo cielo
every cloud has a silver lining → no hay mal que por bien no venga
a cloud of dust/smoke/gas/insects → una nube de polvo/humo/gases/insectos
to be under a cloud (= under suspicion) → estar bajo sospecha; (= resented) → estar desacreditado
to have one's head in the clouds → estar en las nubes
to be on cloud nine → estar en el séptimo cielo
every cloud has a silver lining → no hay mal que por bien no venga
B. VT
C. VI (also to cloud over) → nublarse (also fig)
cloud over VI + ADV → nublarse
Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005
cloud
[ˈklaʊd] n (in sky) → nuage m
every cloud has a silver lining (proverb) → à quelque chose malheur est bon
to have one's head in the clouds → avoir la tête dans les nuages
to be on cloud nine → être aux anges
to be under a cloud (= in disgrace) → être en disgrâce
every cloud has a silver lining (proverb) → à quelque chose malheur est bon
to have one's head in the clouds → avoir la tête dans les nuages
to be on cloud nine → être aux anges
to be under a cloud (= in disgrace) → être en disgrâce
vt
[+ liquid] → troubler
to cloud the issue → brouiller les cartes
cloud over
vi [sky] → se couvrir
[face, eyes] → s'assombrir
Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
cloud
n
→ Wolke f; low cloud(s) delayed takeoff → tief hängende Wolken verzögerten den Start; to have one’s head in the clouds → in höheren Regionen schweben; (momentarily) → geistesabwesend sein; to be up in the clouds (inf) → überglücklich sein; to be on cloud nine (inf) → im siebten Himmel sein or schweben (inf); every cloud has a silver lining (Prov) → kein Unglück ist so groß, es hat sein Glück im Schoß (Prov)
(of smoke, dust etc) → Wolke f; (of insects) → Schwarm m, → Haufen m; (of gas, smoke from fire) → Schwaden m; cloud of dust/smoke → Staub-/Rauchwolke f; a cloud of controversy/confusion surrounded the whole matter → die ganze Angelegenheit wurde von Kontroversen überschattet/nebulöses Durcheinander herrschte in der ganzen Angelegenheit; the cloud of suspicion hanging over him suddenly dispersed → der Verdacht, der über ihm schwebte, verflog plötzlich; he’s been under a cloud for weeks (= under suspicion) → seit Wochen haftet ein Verdacht an ihm; (= in disgrace) → die Geschichte hängt ihm schon wochenlang nach; the clouds are gathering (lit, fig) → es braut sich etwas zusammen
(in liquid, marble) → Wolke f
vt
(fig: = cast gloom on) prospect, sb’s enjoyment → trüben; face, expression → umwölken (geh); (= mar, spoil) friendship, sb’s future → überschatten; (= make less clear) mind, judgement, awareness → trüben; nature of problem → verschleiern; to cloud the issue (= complicate) → es unnötig kompliziert machen; (= hide deliberately) → die Angelegenheit verschleiern
vi = cloud over
cloud
:cloud bank
n → Wolkenwand f
cloudburst
n → Wolkenbruch m
cloud-capped
adj (liter) the cloud mountains/peaks → die wolkenverhangenen Berge/Gipfel
cloud chamber
n → Nebelkammer f
Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007
cloud
[klaʊd]1. n (Met) → nuvola, nube f; (of dust, smoke, gas) → nube; (of insects) → nugolo
to be under a cloud → essere malvisto/a
he has his head in the clouds → ha la testa tra le nuvole
to be on cloud nine → essere al settimo cielo
every cloud has a silver lining (Proverb) → non tutto il male vien per nuocere
to be under a cloud → essere malvisto/a
he has his head in the clouds → ha la testa tra le nuvole
to be on cloud nine → essere al settimo cielo
every cloud has a silver lining (Proverb) → non tutto il male vien per nuocere
2. vt (liquid) → intorbidire; (mirror) → appannare (fig) (judgement) → confondere; (mind) → turbare
a clouded sky → un cielo nuvoloso
to cloud the issue → imbrogliare la questione
a clouded sky → un cielo nuvoloso
to cloud the issue → imbrogliare la questione
cloud over vi + adv (also) (fig) → rannuvolarsi, offuscarsi
Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995
cloud
(klaud)1. a mass of tiny drops of water floating in the sky. white clouds in a blue sky; The hills were hidden in cloud.
2. a great number or quantity of anything small moving together. a cloud of flies.
3. something causing fear, depression etc. a cloud of sadness.
verb1. (often with over) to become cloudy. The sky clouded over and it began to rain.
2. to (cause to) become blurred or not clear. Her eyes were clouded with tears.
3. to (cause to) become gloomy or troubled. His face clouded at the unhappy news.
ˈcloudless adjective free from clouds. a cloudless sky.
ˈcloudy adjective1. full of, having, or covered with clouds. It is a bit cloudy today.
2. not clear. a cloudy photograph/memory.
ˈcloudburst noun a sudden heavy shower of rain.
under a cloud in trouble or disgrace.
Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.
cloud
→ سَحَابَة oblak sky Wolke σύννεφο nube pilvi nuage oblak nuvola 雲 구름 wolk sky chmura nuvem облако moln เมฆ bulut mây 云Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009