Akademik

weather bomb
n.
A massive and powerful storm that develops quickly and without warning.
Example Citations:
The sunny skies and moderate breezes for the first part of the 1,000-km journey were forecast to give way to heavy overcast and a stormy 45-knots. Unpleasant perhaps, but manageable. As things turned out the 45 knots became gusts of 85 knots. Waves of 2-3 metres rose to 20-25 metres as a 'weather bomb' exploded over the region.
—Adam Mayers, "Cold & stormy nights," The Toronto Star, August 12, 2001
Three different storm fronts collided over the Gulf of St. Lawrence and merged to create one massive weather maker. It's a recipe for disaster. Start with a deep depression stalled over the Cabot Strait, combine that with a massive low pressure zone from the south, the result of the remnants of two hurricanes, whip in winds of up to 120 kilometres an hour from the northwest, and you get what meteorologists call a weather bomb.
—Peter Mansbridge, "Nature dropped a bomb on Atlantic Canada today," CBC, November 7, 2001
Earliest Citation:
David Hutchinson, a Justice Department lawyer, told the judge in the nonjury trial that the storm was a 'weather bomb' which developed quickly.
—"Suit Blames Deaths of Three Fishermen on Faulty Weather Forecast," The Associated Press, May 11, 1984
Related Words:
blizzaster
gigantic jet
logic bomb
megacryometeor
space weather
thunderstorm asthma
tornado bait
weather tourist
Category:
Weather

New words. 2013.