˜yÐÄvlog

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comet

[ kom-it ]

noun

Astronomy.
  1. a celestial body moving about the sun, usually in a highly eccentric orbit, consisting of a central mass surrounded by an envelope of dust and gas that may form a tail that streams away from the sun.


comet

/ ˈkɒmɪt; kɒˈmɛtɪk /

noun

  1. a celestial body that travels around the sun, usually in a highly elliptical orbit: thought to consist of a solid frozen nucleus part of which vaporizes on approaching the sun to form a gaseous luminous coma and a long luminous tail
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged†2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

comet

/ °ìų¾â€²Ä­³Ù /

  1. A celestial object that orbits the Sun along an elongated path. A comet that is not near the Sun consists only of a nucleus—a solid core of frozen water, frozen gases, and dust. When a comet comes close to the Sun, its nucleus heats up and releases a gaseous coma that surrounds the nucleus. A comet forms a tail when solar heat or wind forces dust or gas off its coma, with the tail always streaming away from the Sun.
  2. â—† Short-period comets have orbital periods of less than 200 years and come from the region known as the Kuiper belt. Long-period comets have periods greater than 200 years and come from the Oort cloud.
  3. See more at Kuiper beltSee Note at solar system

comet

  1. An object that enters the inner solar system , typically in a very elongated orbit around the sun . Material is boiled off from the comet by the heat of the sun, so that a characteristic tail is formed. The path of a comet can be in the form of an ellipse or a hyperbola . If it follows a hyperbolic path, it enters the solar system once and then leaves forever. If its path is an ellipse, it stays in orbit around the sun.
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Notes

Comets were once believed to be omens, and their appearances in the sky were greatly feared or welcomed.
The most famous comet, Comet Halley (or Halley's comet), passes close to the Earth roughly every seventy-six years, most recently in 1986.
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Derived Forms

  • ˈ³¦´Ç³¾±ð³Ù²¹°ù²â, adjective
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Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms

  • ³¦´Ç³¾Â·±ð³Ù·²¹°ù·²â [kom, -i-ter-ee], ³¦´Ç·³¾±ð³Ù·¾±³¦ [k, uh, -, met, -ik], ³¦´Ç·³¾±ð³Ùi·³¦²¹±ô adjective
  • ³¦´Ç³¾î€½Ä³Ù·±ô¾±°ì±ð adjective
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of comet1

1150–1200; Middle English comete < Anglo-French, Old French < Latin ³¦´Ç³¾Å§³Ùŧ²õ, ³¦´Ç³¾Å§³Ù²¹ < Greek °ì´Ç³¾á¸—tŧ²õ wearing long hair, equivalent to °ì´Ç³¾Å§-, variant stem of °ì´Ç³¾Ã¢²Ô to let one's hair grow (derivative of °ìó³¾Å§ hair) + -³Ùŧ²õ agent suffix
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of comet1

C13: from Old French ³¦´Ç³¾Ã¨³Ù±ð, from Latin ³¦´Ç³¾Å§³Ù²¹, from Greek °ì´Ç³¾Å§³Ùŧ²õ long-haired, from °ì´Ç³¾Å§ hair
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Reality does not instill the same confidence one sees in sci-fi depictions of scenarios in which near-Earth objects like asteroids and comets approach our planet.

From

Messier was interested in comets, so his list was a set of fuzzy objects that might be mistaken for comets.

From

After Trump left office, films like A24’s “Everything Everywhere All at Once†and Netflix’s comet satire “Don’t Look Up†explored themes of large-scale destruction and what it takes to stop it.

From

But Mr Balaji added that while it is expected to be "quite bright", predictions on comet brightness are "notoriously uncertain", with many ending up fainter than initially predicted.

From

Krupp said it’s not certain whether 2003 EH1 is indeed a meteor or a “dead comet,†which means the celestial body has lost its volatile ice and gas that create the glowing tail.

From

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