Noun
The sun is shining and there's not a cloud in the sky.
flying high above the clouds
It stopped raining and the sun poked through the clouds.
a cloud of cigarette smoke
The team has been under a cloud since its members were caught cheating.
There's a cloud of controversy hanging over the election. Verb
greed clouding the minds of men
These new ideas only cloud the issue further.
The final years of her life were clouded by illness.
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Noun
Headquartered in Dallas, Aligned is a fast-growing hyperscale operator that provides cloud infrastructure across some 50 facilities.—Andrew Nusca, Fortune, 16 Oct. 2025 Early Sunday on the same sparsely populated peninsula, the Krasheninnikov volcano spewed white ash clouds into the sky for the first time in hundreds of years.—Olivia B. Waxman, Time, 15 Oct. 2025
Verb
Gone is the cynicism that clouded the Biden era.—Faisal J. Abbas, semafor.com, 16 Oct. 2025 People with diabetes are two to five times more likely to develop cataracts, which cloud the lens of the eye.—Liz Szabo, Scientific American, 14 Oct. 2025 See All Example Sentences for cloud
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English, rock, cloud, from Old English clūd; perhaps akin to Greek gloutos buttock
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