Dictionary Definition
clockwise adj : in the same direction as the
rotating hands of a clock [ant: counterclockwise] adv :
in the direction that the hands of a clock move; "please move
clockwise in a circle" [ant: counterclockwise]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- , /ˈklɒkwaɪz/, /"klQkwaIz/
Etymology
Adverb
Synonyms
Antonyms
Translations
Movement in a circular fashion in the same
direcion as the hands of an analogue clock
- Esperanto: dekstrume
- Finnish: myötäpäivään
- French: dans le sens des aiguilles d’une montre
- German: im Uhrzeigersinn
- Hindi: दक्षिणावर्त्त
- Hungarian: az óra járásával megegyező irányba
- Italian: senso orario
- Japanese: 右回り (みぎまわり, migimawari), 時計回り (とけいまわり, tokēmawari)
- Korean: 시계 방향 (sige banghyang)
- Norwegian: medurs
- Portuguese: sentido horario
- Russian: по часовой стрелке (po časovój strélke)
- Slovak: v smere ručičiek
- Spanish: en el sentido de las agujas del reloj
- Swedish: medurs, medsols
- Welsh: clocwedd
Adjective
- Moving clockwise;
having rotary motion in the manner of a clock.
- In the southern hemisphere the flow of air around a low-pressure system is clockwise.
See also
- pedialite clockwise and counterclockwise
Extensive Definition
- For other meanings of clockwise, see clockwise (disambiguation).
A clockwise motion is one that proceeds 'like the
clock's hands': from the
top to the right, then down and then to the left, and back to the
top. In a mathematical sense, a circle defined parametrically in a
positive Cartesian plane by the equations x = sin t and y = cos
t is traced clockwise as t increases in value. Another way to
describe this motion is, relative to above you, clockwise is the
motion you make when you constantly turn right. The opposite sense
of rotation is anticlockwise (the current British
English term), or counterclockwise (now chiefly North
American English).
Origin of the term
Before clocks were commonplace, the terms 'sunwise' and deiseil (from the Scottish Gaelic from the same root as the Latin dexter, "right". The word is also used for "ready") were used for clockwise. (Of course, deasil (righthandwards) is only sunwise in the Northern Hemisphere.) 'Widdershins' or 'withershins' (from Middle Low German weddersinnes, "opposite course") was used for anticlockwise.Technically, the terms clockwise and
anticlockwise can only be applied to a rotational motion once a
side of the rotational plane is specified, from which the rotation
is observed. For example, the daily rotation of the Earth is
anticlockwise when viewed from the North Pole,
and clockwise when viewed from the South
Pole.
Clocks traditionally follow this sense of
rotation because of the clock's predecessor: the sundial. Clocks with hands were
first built in the Northern Hemisphere (see main
article), and they were made to work like sundials. In order
for a horizontal sundial to work (in the Northern Hemisphere), it
must be placed looking southward. Then, when the Sun moves in the sky
(east to south to west), the shadow cast on the opposite side of
the sundial moves with the same sense of rotation (west to north to
east). That's why hours were drawn in sundials in that manner, and
that's why modern clocks have their numbers set in the same
way.
Occasionally, clocks whose hands revolve
anticlockwise are nowadays sold as a novelty. Historically, some
Jewish
clocks were built that way, for example in some Synagogue towers in
Europe. This was done in accordance with the right-to-left reading
direction of Hebrew
.
Usage
Typically, screws, bolts, and bottle caps are loosened (moved towards the observer) anticlockwise and tightened (moved away from the observer) clockwise, in accordance with the right-hand rule. One mnemonic for remembering this is "righty-tighty, lefty-loosey" (right to tighten, left to loosen.) (R H Daniel, 1980) The problem with the mnemonic is that it only works when viewing right and left relative to the top of the circle. When viewing relative to the bottom, the mnemonic becomes "lefty-tighty, righty-loosy". Another simple to use procedure based on the right-hand rule, is to point the thumb of the right hand for right-handed threads or left hand for left-handed threads in the direction one wants the screw, nut or bolt to move, then the fingers of the hand will curl in the direction one needs to turn the screw, nut or bolt to achieve the desired result.The reason for the clockwise orientation of most
screws is that supination of the arm, which
is used by a right-handed person to turn a screw clockwise, is
generally stronger than pronation.
Sometimes the opposite sense of thread is used
for a special reason; a thread might need to be left-handed to
prevent the prevalent stresses from loosening it. In a pair of
bicycle
pedals, for instance, one must be reverse-threaded, or the
pedal will fall off. Some gas fittings are left-handed to prevent
disastrous misconnection; for example, oxygen fittings are
right-handed but acetylene and other flammable gases use
left-handed fittings.
In trigonometry, and mathematics in general,
plane angles are
conventionally measured anticlockwise. In navigation, compass headings increase in a
clockwise direction around the compass card, starting with 0° at
the top of the card.
In humans
Most left-handed humans prefer to draw circles clockwise and traverse buildings clockwise. It is believed that this can be attributed to a dominant brain hemisphere.References
See also
clockwise in Bulgarian: Посока на часовниковата
стрелка
clockwise in German: Drehrichtung
clockwise in Spanish: Sentido del reloj
clockwise in Persian: ساعتگرد و
پادساعتگرد
clockwise in French: Sens trigonométrique
clockwise in Hebrew: כיוון השעון
clockwise in Italian: Senso orario
clockwise in Dutch: Wijzerzin
clockwise in Japanese: 時計回り
clockwise in Polish: Lewoskrętność
clockwise in Portuguese: Sentido horário
clockwise in Romanian: Sens orar
clockwise in Russian: По часовой стрелке и
против часовой стрелки
clockwise in Simple English: Clockwise
clockwise in Finnish: Myötäpäivä
clockwise in Swedish: Med- och moturs
clockwise in Chinese: 順時針方向
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
anticlockwise, around, conservative, counterclockwise,
dexter, dextral, dextrocardial, dextrocerebral, dextrocular, dextrogyrate, dextrogyratory, dextropedal, dextrorotary, dextrorse, earthward, head over heels,
heavenward, heels
over head, homeward, in
a circle, in a spin, in a whirl, in circles, landward, leeward, leftward, off, positive, reactionary, right, right-hand, right-wing,
right-wingish, rightward, round, round about, round and
round, seaward, starboard, widdershins, windward