| snow |
water vapour from the sky that falls as white flakes and covers the ground
Ãâó: www.englishclub.com/vocabulary/festivals-christmas...
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| snow |
White ice crystal form of precipitation that can accumulate on the ground occuring during cold conditions.
Ãâó: australiasevereweather.com/photography/define2.htm
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| snow |
The largest type of two-masted sailing vessel of the era, the snow, carried square sails on both masts, with a trysail on a jacknast known as a snowmast --which was a spar set on the deck about a foot behind the mainmast and attached at the top to the mainmast. Also: A "Snow Rigged Vessel" or "Snow Rigged Brig" had similar rigging.
Ãâó: www.islandregister.com/terms.html
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| snow |
WHEN USED WITHOUT A QUALIFYING WORD, SUCH AS OCCASIONAL OR INTERMITTENT, MEANS THAT A FALL OF SNOW IS OF A STEADY NATURE AND WILL PROBABLY CONTINUE FOR SEVERAL HOURS WITHOUT STOPPING.
Ãâó: www.srh.noaa.gov/lub/safety/tips_facts/winter_term...
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| snow |
Snow is frozen precipitation in the form of a six-sided ice crystal. Snow requires temperatures to be below freezing in all or most of the atmosphere from the surface up to cloud level.
Ãâó: www.weather.com/encyclopedia/winter/precip.html
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