willy willy
See also: willy-willy
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From an unidentified Australian Aboriginal language.
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
willy willy (plural willy willies)
- (Australia) A dust devil; a tornado
- 2000, John Marsden, Burning for Revenge, page 29,
- There were sheets of roofing iron torn off by the willy-willy of 1994, tanks with holes in them, a few other cars and tractors, and bits of machinery.
- 2009, Keith Scott, Colin Pain, Regolith Science, page 384,
- None of the coarser deposits have been observed to move on at any of the lander sites; however, dust accumulates and is removed both seasonally and by local wind gusts and willy willies (dust devils; Greeley et al. 2006).
- 2013, Richard Flanagan, The Narrow Road to the Deep North, Random House, 2014, Part Five, Chapter 12,
- There was wind behind them and wind coming at them, fire everywhere and wind whipping up willy-willies of swirling red embers, glowing magic cones that turned everything they touched into flame.
- 2000, John Marsden, Burning for Revenge, page 29,
- (now rare) A tropical cyclone in Australia.
- 2000, Blake Education staff, Terrific Topics: Middle Primary: Book 1, Blake Education, Australia, page 92,
- Hurricanes, cyclones, willy-willies and typhoons are all storms with incredibly strong and powerful winds.
- 2000, Blake Education staff, Terrific Topics: Middle Primary: Book 1, Blake Education, Australia, page 92,
Synonyms
- (wind storm): tornado, twister, waterspout
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