Weather Vocabulary

Weather Vocabulary
Weather Vocabulary

Weather Vocabulary

Weather Vocabulary

Barometer – a device that measures air pressure and shows when the weather is likely to change.

Sentence – The slightest change in the barometer, although it might be due to factors quite outside our control, would correspondingly depress them.

Weather Vocabulary

Blizzard – a severe snow storm with strong winds.

Sentence – A blizzard was blasting great drifts of snow across the lake.

Weather Vocabulary

Breezy – with wind that is quite strong but pleasant.

Sentence – Rose Clayton spends her days drifting on a breezy lake with the warm sun on her back.

Weather Vocabulary

Chilly – (of weather, conditions in a room, or parts of the body) cold.

Sentence – Mary Ann had made an effort at jazzing up the chilly modern interiors.

Weather Vocabulary

Clear – easy to understand, hear, read, or see.

Sentence – Rain comes after sunshine, and after a dark cloud, a clear sky.

Weather Vocabulary

Cloudy – with clouds.

Sentence – From Sunday to Tuesday, it will be cloudy with occasional drizzle in western and northwestern areas, especially around coasts and hills.

Weather Vocabulary

Cold front – the weather condition in which a moving mass of cold air pushes into a mass of warm air resulting in a fall in temperature.

Sentence – Clearing conditions were forecast behind the cold front that dragged low clouds through Central Florida early Friday.

Weather Vocabulary

Flurries – a sudden light fall of snow, blown in different directions by the wind.

Sentence – Snow flurries wafted in Saturday afternoon, mixing with the blowing sand and occasionally giving the Mall the look of winter tundra.

Weather Vocabulary

Fog – a weather condition in which very small drops of water come together to form a thick cloud close to the land or sea, making it difficult to see.

Sentence – It is dangerous to drive in a thick fog.

Weather Vocabulary

Forecast – a statement of what is judged likely to happen in the future, especially in connection with a particular situation, or the expected weather conditions.

Sentence – The forecast said there would be sunny intervals and showers.

Weather Vocabulary

Global warming – a gradual increase in world temperatures caused by gases such as carbon dioxide that are collecting in the air around the earth and stopping heat escaping into space.

Sentence – The threat of global warming will eventually force the US to slow down its energy consumption.

Weather Vocabulary

Gust – a sudden strong wind.

Sentence – You have no wrong, I am not wrong just a gust of wind, blew the commitment.

Weather Vocabulary

Hail – small, hard balls of ice that fall from the sky like rain.

Sentence – Rain, snow and hail are collectively known as precipitation.

Weather Vocabulary

Hazy – Hazy air or weather is not clear, especially because of heat

Sentence – Love, is the youth frenzy years round of apricot yellow months, fine but hazy.

Weather Vocabulary

Heat – the quality of being hot or warm, or the temperature of something.

Sentence – In August the heat is barely tolerable.

Weather Vocabulary

High-pressure – involving pressure that is greater than usual.

Sentence – People ask them-selves why they should volunteer for high-pressure teams when only individual performance will be rewarded.

Weather Vocabulary

Humid – (of air and weather conditions) containing extremely small drops of water in the air.

Sentence – Theywere not prepared for the humid heat of the tropical forest.

Weather Vocabulary

Humidity – a measurement of how much water there is in the air.

Sentence – The temperature is almost eighty degrees, the humidity in the low thirties.

Weather Vocabulary

Hurricane – a violent wind that has a circular movement, especially in the West Atlantic Ocean.

Sentence – Rescue teams worked desperately to restore utilities in the area shattered by the hurricane.

Weather Vocabulary

Lightning – a flash of bright light in the sky that is produced by electricity moving between clouds or from clouds to the ground.

Sentence – That house was struck by lightning and burned down.

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20th February, IELTS Daily Task
https://www.instamojo.com/CZMOGA
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