doldrums

doldrums
Regions of calm, light variable winds and thunderstorms girdling the ocean near the equator and varying in extent and position according to the season. The doldrums lie between the northeasterly tradewinds of the Northern Hemisphere and the southwesterly tradewinds of the Southern Hemisphere, roughly between latitudes 10°N and 10°S. Air heated at the earth’s surface rises in the doldrums region and flows northeastward and southwest-ward at heights from 0.8 to 6 km to form anti-tradewinds. The doldrums are low-pressure calm latitudes and the horse latitudes are high-pressure calm latitudes.

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  • doldrums — dol‧drums [ˈdɒldrəmz ǁ ˈdoʊl , ˈdɑːl , ˈdɒːl ] noun [plural] informal if an industry or market is in the doldrums, there is very little increase in prices or very little trade taking place: • The mortgage market has been in the doldrums for three …   Financial and business terms

  • doldrums — If a person is in the doldrums, they are depressed. If a project or something similar is in the doldrums, it isn t making any progress …   The small dictionary of idiomes

  • doldrums — dol drums (d[o^]l dr[u^]mz), n. pl. [Cf. Gael. doltrum grief, vexation?] A part of the ocean near the equator, abounding in calms, squalls, and light, baffling winds, which sometimes prevent all progress for weeks; so called by sailors. [1913… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • doldrums — ● doldrums nom masculin pluriel (anglais doldrums, calme équatorial) Zone des basses pressions équatoriales, région de calme atmosphérique séparant les alizés des deux hémisphères …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • doldrums — ► PLURAL NOUN (the doldrums) 1) a state of stagnation or depression. 2) a region of the Atlantic Ocean with calms, sudden storms, and light unpredictable winds. ORIGIN perhaps from DULL(Cf. ↑dulness) …   English terms dictionary

  • Doldrums — (engl., spr. dólldröms), s. Kalmen …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • doldrums — 1811, from dulled, pp. of dullen, from O.E. dol foolish, dull, ending perhaps patterned on tantrum …   Etymology dictionary

  • doldrums — boredom, ennui, *tedium Analogous words: dejection, depression, gloom, blues, dumps (see SADNESS) Antonyms: spirits, high spirits …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • doldrums — [n] depression apathy, black mood*, blahs*, blue funk*, blues*, boredom, bummer*, dejection, disinterest, dismals, downer, dullness, dumps*, ennui, funk*, gloom, inactivity, indifference, inertia, lassitude, letdown, listlessness, malaise, mopes* …   New thesaurus

  • doldrums — [dōl′drəmz, däl′drəmz] pl.n. [< ? ME dul (see DULL), after TANTRUM] 1. a) low spirits; dull, gloomy, listless feeling b) sluggishness or complete inactivity; stagnation 2. a) equatorial ocean regions note …   English World dictionary

  • doldrums — dol|drums [ˈdɔldrəmz US ˈdoul , ˈda:l , ˈdo:l ] n [plural] informal [Date: 1700 1800; Origin: Perhaps from dold stupid (1400 1500)] a) if an industry, company, activity etc is in the doldrums, it is not doing well or developing in the doldrums ▪… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

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