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Cumulus   Listen
Cumulus

noun
(pl. cumuli)
1.
A globular cloud.  Synonym: cumulus cloud.
2.
A collection of objects laid on top of each other.  Synonyms: agglomerate, cumulation, heap, mound, pile.



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"Cumulus" Quotes from Famous Books



... Beneath a cirro-cumulus—or mackerel sky—again that day, wonderfully beautiful because of its perfection of design, we were gradually rising over the domed elevation we had previously observed, upon which we found masses of ...
— Across Unknown South America • Arnold Henry Savage Landor

... other side. With the office always in her mind as material for metaphors, Una compared the lady-bug's method to Troy Wilkins's habit of having his correspondence filed and immediately calling for it again. She turned her face to the sky. She was uplifted by the bold contrast of cumulus clouds and the ...
— The Job - An American Novel • Sinclair Lewis

... to the window once and looked out. It promised to be a wild night. Far away in the south-west lay a great cumulus of rugged clouds from which dark streamers radiated over the sky, like the advance guard of an army. Here and there a pale star twinkled dimly out through the rifts, but the greater part of the heavens was black and threatening. It was so dark that she ...
— The Firm of Girdlestone • Arthur Conan Doyle

... first cloud appeared in the north, just above Hague's Peak. It was a heavy cumulus cloud, but I do not know from what direction it came. It rose high in the air, drifted slowly toward the west, and then seemed to dissolve. At any rate, it vanished. About 10.30 several heavy clouds rose from behind Long's Peak, moving toward the northwest, rising higher into the ...
— Wild Life on the Rockies • Enos A. Mills

... standing stiffly as if to state with grim definiteness that all rainbow hopes are folly and there will be no more blossoming for them. Their leaves are dun and sere where they have not already fallen and their tops that in early September were such soft cumulus clouds of golden yellow are but scrawny clots of brown, draggled by the tears in which the sudden sun has drowned the pasture. Yet these least of all should be pessimistic in November, for as the sun dries ...
— Old Plymouth Trails • Winthrop Packard


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