The permanent, large-scale winds that blow steadily across the globe from the high-pressure belts toward the low-pressure belts, deflected by the Earth's rotation; the trade winds, the westerlies, and the polar easterlies.
The three planetary wind names with their direction, the Coriolis deflection, the Roaring Forties, and the planetary-versus-periodic-versus-local classification are recurring climatology facts.
Trade winds (toward the equator, north-east and south-east) versus westerlies (poleward, south-west and north-west); planetary winds (permanent) versus periodic (monsoon, breezes) versus local (Loo, Chinook); the Coriolis force deflects right in the north, left in the south.
Permanent winds: trades (toward equator), westerlies (poleward, the Roaring Forties), and polar easterlies, all deflected by the Coriolis force.