fair weather in English

pleasant weathe

Use "fair weather" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "fair weather" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "fair weather", or refer to the context using the word "fair weather" in the English Dictionary.

1. 15 In fair weather prepare for foul.

2. Cirrus clouds are often seen during fair weather.

3. That is why Anticyclones are often associated with fair weather

4. Overreach is also foolish because it exposes conservatives as fair - weather federalists.

5. For example, an H represents high pressure, implying good and fair weather.

6. The roads were in bad shape , and they were mostly fair - weather communication lines .

7. A fair-weather system—an Anticyclone—may stretch from the Rockies to the Appalachians

8. Between depressions there are often small mobile anticyclones that bring periods of fair weather.

9. Unlike cyclones, in general Anticyclones are accompanied by fair weather and the winds are generally moderate.

10. One of the major criticisms of the rural roads programmes has been that they are ' fair - weather roads programmes ' .

11. Low-pressure centers (cyclones) are often associated with cloudy or rainy weather, whereas highpressure centers (Anticyclones) are often associated with fair weather.

12. Sally is a typical fair - weather friend:she's very pally when I have plenty of money but doesn't want to know me when I haven't.

13. Dances in phase 3 (i.e. exceeded fair weather) are accelerated, whereas in phase 5 and 6 (weather change accomplished and beginning stabilization) they are retarded.

14. The unmetalled roads falling in second - and third - class categories were mostly fair - weather routes without permanent bridges and were unusable for a part of the year .

15. Electric currents of about one ampere per storm flow upward from the positive tops of thunderclouds and return to the earth in the fair-weather regions of the atmosphere. . . .

16. Almanacks serve as clocks and watches for nine-tenths of mankind; and in fair weather are far more sure and regular than the best time-piece manufactur’d here or in London

17. Large-surface measurements of the albedo over the glacier tongue show the gradual rising of the regions with low albedo values in the course of a fair weather period of 6 days.

18. Convertibles are no longer simply fair-weather friends; No reason to fear a sudden storm with retractable hardtops Like so many female pastors throughout the ages, Burdick, or Reverend Perie as she was Affectionally called, was a wife, a mother, and a tireless servant of God.

19. In countries where Theravāda Buddhism is practiced by the majority of people (Sri Lanka, Cambodia, Laos, Burma, Thailand), it is customary for Buddhists to hold elaborate festivals, especially during the fair weather season, paying homage to the 28 Buddhas described in Chapter 27 of the Buddhavamsa

20. Aware of their efforts to tempt him, Jesus replies: “When evening falls you are accustomed to say, ‘It will be fair weather, for the sky is fire-red’; and at morning, ‘It will be wintry, rainy weather today, for the sky is fire-red, but gloomy-looking.’

21. The pass over the mountains is Circuitous and steep, but in fair weather persons travel on the road along the shore. THE GEOGRAPHY OF STRABO, VOLUME III (OF 3) STRABO As the train ground its way up the Circuitous grades, Houston felt that he was headed finally for the dissolution

22. ‘The rural imagery is varied: the rising sap, meadows, individual plants, birds, a Bedewed rose among its thorns, storm, flood, and fair weather.’ ‘Here we are weary and toil worn, but yonder is the land of rest where the sweat of labour shall no more bedew the workers brow, and fatigue shall be forever banished.’

23. Calm (adj.) late 14c., of the sea, "windless, without motion or agitation;" of a wind, "light, gentle," perhaps via Old French Calme "tranquility, quiet," or directly from Old Italian Calma "quiet, fair weather," which probably is from Late Latin cauma "heat of the mid-day sun" (in Italy, a time when everything rests and is still), from Greek kauma "heat" (especially of the sun), from kaiein