The difference between Calm and Windy

When used as nouns, calm means the state of being calm, whereas windy means fart.

When used as adjectives, calm means peaceful, quiet, especially free from anger and anxiety, whereas windy means accompanied by wind.


Calm is also verb with the meaning: to make calm.

check bellow for the other definitions of Calm and Windy

  1. Calm as an adjective (of a person):

    Peaceful, quiet, especially free from anger and anxiety.

  2. Calm as an adjective (of a place or situation):

    Free of noise and disturbance.

  3. Calm as an adjective (of water):

    with few or no waves on the surface; not rippled.

  4. Calm as an adjective:

    Without wind or storm.

  1. Calm as a noun (in a person):

    The state of being calm; peacefulness; absence of worry, anger, fear or other strong negative emotion.

  2. Calm as a noun (in a place or situation):

    The state of being calm; absence of noise and disturbance.

  3. Calm as a noun:

    A period of time without wind.

  1. Calm as a verb (transitive):

    To make calm.

    Examples:

    "to calm a crying baby"

    "to calm the passions"

  2. Calm as a verb (intransitive):

    To become calm.

  1. Windy as an adjective:

    Accompanied by wind.

    Examples:

    "It was a long and windy night."

  2. Windy as an adjective:

    Unsheltered and open to the wind.

    Examples:

    "They made love in a windy bus shelter."

  3. Windy as an adjective:

    Empty and lacking substance.

    Examples:

    "They made windy promises they would not keep."

  4. Windy as an adjective:

    Long-winded; orally verbose.

  5. Windy as an adjective:

    Flatulent.

    Examples:

    "The [[Tex-Mex]] meal had made them somewhat windy."

  6. Windy as an adjective (slang):

    Nervous, frightened.

  1. Windy as a noun (colloquial):

    fart

  1. Windy as an adjective (of a path etc):

    Having many bends; winding, twisting or tortuous.