Chernobyl
See also: Chernóbyl
English
Alternative forms
- Chornobyl (Ukraine)
Etymology
Borrowed from Russian Черно́быль (Černóbylʹ).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /tʃɜːˈnɒbəl/, /tʃɜːˈnəʊbəl/
- (General American) IPA(key): /t͡ʃɚˈnoʊbəl/
- Rhymes: -ɒbəl, -əʊbəl
Proper noun
Chernobyl
- A partially abandoned city and ghost town in northern Ukraine, known as the site of a nuclear disaster.
- 1991 July 26, Brad Knickerbocker, “Think Tank on the Efficient Energy Trail”, in Christian Science Monitor[1]:
- A couple of oil shocks, a Chernobyl meltdown, and a Gulf War later, his basic message - the need to emphasize efficiency and renewable resources over oil and nuclear power - is still a minority view, […]
- (by extension) The 1986 nuclear accident which resulted in the abandonment of the aforementioned city.
- After Chernobyl, very few nuclear power plants were built for years.
Usage notes
Ukrainians recommend the use of "Chornobyl" instead of "Chernobyl". The former name is the place's name in Ukrainian, while the latter, being from Russian, is seen as supportive of Russian nationalism.
Derived terms
- Chernobyl syndrome
- Chernobylian
- Chernobylic
- chernobylite (the mineral)
- Chernobylite (a person from Chernobyl)
Translations
city in Ukraine
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Noun
Chernobyl (plural Chernobyls)
- (by extension) A major nuclear-energy accident.
- 1994 August, “Nuclear chaos”, in Popular Science, volume 245, number 2, page 54:
- Many secret cities were Chernobyls in slow motion.
- 1999 May 6, Terence Scully, “When cell phones kill our brain waves, we will worry less”, in The Record (Kitchener, Ont.):
- The effects of a Chernobyl disaster in my community would probably be barely noticeable.
- 2007 September 7, “Imagining a World Without Humans”, in NPR_TalkNation:
- So those would be a lot of Chernobyls that the ecosystem would have to deal with.
- 2010 March 10, Ben Garcia, “Many Kuwaitis yet to be convinced on nuke energy”, in Kuwait Times:
- It has to be handled properly with great accuracy and no room for mistakes, because if we do have like a Chernobyl catastrophe, God forbid, it could wipe out our entire people.
See also
Italian
Alternative forms
Etymology
Borrowed from Russian Черно́быль (Černóbylʹ).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈt͡ʃɛr.no.bil/, /t͡ʃer.noˈbil/[1]
- Rhymes: -ɛrnobil, -il
Proper noun
Chernobyl ?
References
- ^ Chernobil in Luciano Canepari, Dizionario di Pronuncia Italiana (DiPI)
Portuguese
Proper noun
Chernobyl f
- alternative spelling of Chernobil