seasonal

adj
/ˈsiːzənəl/

Etymology

From season + -al.

  1. derived from *seh₁-
  2. derived from satiō
  3. derived from seson
  4. inherited from sesoun
  5. suffixed as seasonal — “season + -al

Definitions

  1. Of, related to, or reliant on a season or period of the year, especially with regard to…

    Of, related to, or reliant on a season or period of the year, especially with regard to weather characteristics.

    • It is a seasonal swimming pool.
    • The cult of the holiday camp has brought seasonal expresses to fresh destinations such as Penychain, in North Wales; over 250,000 people go by train annually to Butlin's holiday camps alone.
    • Skilled foreign farm workers are the backbone of US agriculture and are traditionally in the US on H-2A seasonal visas, which saw its highest ever utilization rate this year, according to the Farm Bureau.
  2. Appropriate to the season.

    • Q: How's the weather there? A: The wind is pretty stiff, but it's seasonal, so no complaints.
  3. Anything that is seasonal, such as a financial trend, a product for sale, or an employee.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for seasonal. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA