I would say "maybe" - but with some reservations.
Back in the days when I imported a wide array of "Chinese" cymbidiums, my supplier grew outdoors, and the plants saw 100° in summer (but under very heavy shade), and occasionally saw snow cover in the winter, when they were unshaded. Those periods tended to be brief and not much colder than freezing.
I'm up in Bucks County, and I grew them similarly outdoors, moving the pots indoors when the temperature was gong below freezing.
I don't know about the "in the ground" part, but I would think you'd be best digging out pits to sink pots in, rather than direct planting, so they could be easily extracted when the temperatures get as low as they have this winter. A brief freeze is not an issue, but an extended period of frozen roots certainly is.
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