Andy's Wordshop
Back to turbogenerators. This does not mean "generators which have extra added, hardly controllable power". It means "generators which are driven by turbines", and the
word turbine (say /TŐ-bajn) comes from the Latin word for a spinning-top (Slovak "vlk" (?) or Czech "káča", as a child's toy). You have an axle ("os") with a flywheel ("zotrvačník") at one end and
a set of vanes ("lopatky") at the other.
A jet of water or steam acts on the vanes, spinning them round, the axle rotates and drives a generator which makes electricity, like an electric motor working the
other way round (that's physics - don't ask me for details). The idea of spinning round is also associated with storms (or cyclones) and we get the word "turbulence", the disturbed air which can
make flying an unpleasant experience.