cyclic
English
editEtymology
editFrom Ancient Greek κυκλικός (kuklikós). Possibly from cycle -ic.
Pronunciation
edit- (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /ˈsaɪ.klɪk/, /ˈsɪk.lɪk/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
- (General Australian) IPA(key): /ˈsɑɪ.klɪk/
Adjective
editcyclic (comparative more cyclic, superlative most cyclic)
- Characterized by, or moving in cycles, or happening at regular intervals.
- The weather had a cyclic pattern of rain and sun.
- 1960 March, “Talking of Trains: N.E. cyclic m.u. workings”, in Trains Illustrated, page 136:
- Our recent article on the York-Knaresborough-Harrogate branch mentioned that the diesel multiple-units covering the passenger service did so in the course of complicated cyclic diagrams.
- (chemistry, of a compound) Having chains of atoms arranged in a ring.
- Benzene and cyclohexane are both cyclic compounds.
- (botany) Having parts arranged in a whorl.
- (mathematics, of a group) Being generated by only one element.
- (geometry, of a polygon) Able to be inscribed in a circle.
- (firearms, of an automatic weapon) Firing at its full cyclic rate.
- 2011, James D. Hornfischer, “26: Suicide”, in Neptune's Inferno: The U.S. Navy at Guadalcanal[1], New York: Bantam Books, →ISBN, retrieved 17 December 2022, page 256:
- On it came, closer and closer, and as it did so it became clear that the pilot, if he was alive, had terminal intentions. Though the torpedo somehow missed, the plane itself did not. To those watching helplessly from other stations, the ship's antiaircraft gunners, in their final moments, were an inspiration: eyes focused through iron sights on the plane as it sped at them, weapons hot, going cyclic, hunched down and never flinching until the Betty struck high on the mainmast, killing them all.
Synonyms
edit- (happening at regular intervals): periodic; see also Thesaurus:periodic
Antonyms
editDerived terms
edit- alicyclic
- allocyclic
- anticyclic
- autocyclic
- azacyclic
- benzocyclic
- bicyclic
- carbocyclic
- cocyclic
- concyclic
- cyclical
- cyclically
- cyclic chorus
- cyclic group
- cyclic-inscriptable
- cyclicism
- cyclicity
- cyclicly
- cyclic nucleotide
- cyclic number
- cyclic poet
- cyclic quadrilateral
- cyclic rate
- cyclic redundancy check
- cyclic vomiting syndrome
- decacyclic
- demicyclic
- dicyclic
- diskcyclic
- electrocyclic
- endocyclic
- eucyclic
- exocyclic
- geocyclic
- heptacyclic
- heterocyclic
- hexacyclic
- holocyclic
- homocyclic
- hypercyclic
- intracyclic
- isocyclic
- macrocyclic
- mesocyclic
- metacyclic
- monocyclic
- multicyclic
- negacyclic
- noncyclic
- octacyclic
- oligocyclic
- ovulocyclic
- oxacyclic
- pancyclic
- pentacyclic
- pericyclic
- photocyclic
- pluricyclic
- polycyclic
- procyclic
- pseudocyclic
- quasicyclic
- semicyclic
- supercyclic
- tetracyclic
- tricyclic
- unicyclic
Translations
editcharacterized by, or moving in cycles
|
of a compound having chains of atoms arranged in a ring
|
having parts arranged in a whorl
|
being generated by only one element
able to be inscribed in a circle
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Noun
editcyclic (plural cyclics)
- (aviation) The flight control used to control a helicopter's direction and rate of horizontal movement by tilting the lift vector of the helicopter's main rotor disk.
Categories:
- English terms derived from Ancient Greek
- English terms suffixed with -ic
- English 2-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- English lemmas
- English adjectives
- English terms with usage examples
- English terms with quotations
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