hurriquake
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Blend of hurricane + earthquake. First attested in 1999 as a nonce word.
Noun
[edit]hurriquake (plural hurriquakes)
- (neologism) An incidence of a hurricane and an earthquake occurring in quick succession.
- 2011 November 16, ARRL Web site, “The ARES E-Letter for November 16, 2011”, in rec.radio.info[2] (Usenet):
- HURRIQUAKE 2011 ¶ The week of August 22, 2011 may go down in weather history as one of the strangest in the Washington, DC area : On Tuesday, August 23, our area was hit with a magnitude 5.8 earthquake. […] ¶ […] The following Saturday night, Hurricane Irene passed just east of the area.
- 2023 August 22, Laura J. Nelson, “What happened when a ‘hurriquake’ struck Ojai? Little damage, plenty of weird vibes”, in Los Angeles Times:
- Push notifications began to warn Southern California residents of the risk of flash flooding just a few hours before alerts about the earthquake arrived. Memes began to circulate instantly, as well as a T-shirt that read: “I Survived Hurriquake Hilary.”
- 2023 August 24, Gina Christian, “'There's no knocking down God': Catholic college students weather 'hurriquake' with faith”, in Detroit Catholic:
- "Like most of my peers, I did not expect a 'hurriquake' to start off the year," said senior Peter King of Lenexa, Kansas.