comet
See also: Comet
English

The comet Hale–Bopp in the night sky.
Etymology
Partly from Old French comete (French comète), and partly from Old English comēta, both from Latin cometes, from Ancient Greek κομήτης (komḗtēs, “longhaired”), referring to the tail of a comet, from κόμη (kómē, “hair”).
Pronunciation
- enPR: kŏm'ət, IPA(key): /ˈkɒmət/
Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -ɒmɪt
Noun
comet (plural comets)
- (astronomy) A celestial body consisting mainly of ice, dust and gas in a (usually very eccentric) orbit around the Sun and having a "tail" of matter blown back from it by the solar wind as it approaches the Sun.
- A celestial phenomenon with the appearance given by the orbiting celestial body.
- Any of several species of hummingbird found in the Andes.
Synonyms
- faxed star (rare, dialectal)
Derived terms
- Biela's Comet
- cometarium
- cometary
- comet darner (Aeshna longipes)
- cometesimal
- comet-finder
- cometic
- cometless
- cometlike
- cometocentric
- cometography
- cometography
- cometoid
- cometology
- dead comet
- exocomet
- Halley's Comet
- interstellar comet
- nonperiodic comet
- parabolic comet
- periodical comet
- periodic comet
- short-period comet
- vomit comet
Translations
a celestial body, generally with a tail
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Catalan
Latin
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