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cataclysm

noun

cat·​a·​clysm ˈka-tə-ˌkli-zəm How to pronounce cataclysm (audio)
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: a momentous and violent event marked by overwhelming upheaval and demolition
broadly : an event that brings great changes
an international economic cataclysm
cataclysmal adjective
or cataclysmic
cataclysmically adverb

Example Sentences

floods, earthquakes, and other cataclysms The country barely survived the cataclysm of war. The revolution could result in worldwide cataclysm.
Recent Examples on the Web Fogerty wrote all three of them right around the original Earth Day, and each one works weather metaphors almost too on-the-nose for the climate-change cataclysm at hand. David Cantwell, The New Yorker, 17 Aug. 2022 Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, meanwhile, doesn't foresee market cataclysm once the bear market officially begins. Nicole Goodkind, CNN, 20 May 2022 In any event, between 1975 and 1979 possibly more than two million people were murdered in this cataclysm. Deborah Eisenberg, The New York Review of Books, 19 Aug. 2021 This cataclysm spewed huge amounts of gases that geologists suspect altered the global climate and led to the extinction of nearly 80 percent of life on the planet—though the dinosaurs somehow survived and later thrived. Sasha Warren, Scientific American, 1 July 2022 Wilder’s play, an absurdist survey of humankind’s remarkable endurance through all manner of cataclysm across the ages, doesn’t need the layers of attitudinal commentary Blain-Cruz adds. Washington Post, 29 Apr. 2022 Known as the Black Death, the cataclysm of 1346-1352 is still the most deadly pandemic in human history. Kiona N. Smith, Ars Technica, 21 June 2022 Politics in Berlin has undergone a political cataclysm that no one saw coming. Noah Barkin, The Atlantic, 1 Mar. 2022 An Everest-size comet is hurtling toward Earth, and in exactly six months and 14 days, the planet will be shattered to pieces, leaving every living creature to perish in a cataclysm of fire and flood. Maya Salam, New York Times, 23 Jan. 2022 See More

Word History

Etymology

French cataclysme, from Latin cataclysmos, from Greek kataklysmos, from kataklyzein to inundate, from kata- + klyzein to wash — more at clyster

First Known Use

1599, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of cataclysm was in 1599

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