Use "humid air" in a sentence

1. 15 Going out on to Des Voeux, she breathed in the hot, humid air.

2. We have Blowers that handle clean air, dusty air, abrasive dust, corrosive humid air, and combustible dust

3. Standard clots of bovine fibrin collapsed in the highly humid air stream of a laboratory device.

4. Condensation is water vapor that turns into liquid form when warm and humid air comes into contact with a cold surface

5. The Bibs system provides low moisture absorption and complete coverage against humid air currents to increase the durability of the building.

6. Furthermore, in the air supply operation, very humid air is supplied to the room by means of the humidification unit (50).

7. The crystals are stable for days in dry air, but readily absorb water from humid air to form a concentrated solution.

8. An analytical and experimental study of frost growth on a cooled plate being exposed to forced convective humid air stream was carried out.

9. Dr Monari believes bubbles of ionised gas are created when sulphurous fumes from the River Hesja react with the humid air of the valley.

10. Moist humid air, warm temperatures and bright, indirect light are requirements for the Adiantum Fern and it is best suited for growing in a terrarium or a naturally humid room.

11. * As the sun heats the upper level of waters in the west, near Indonesia and Australia, the hot and humid air rises in the atmosphere, causing a low-pressure system near the water’s surface.

12. During germination in vitro, however, the two types of pollens greatly differ in their capacity for protein synthesis.Binucleate pollen species such as Typha, which are characterized by slow respiration in humid air and prolonged lag …

13. These small compact women, who remind me of my own grandmothers years ago, are not, as one might expect, from Silhanoukville nor are they even Cambodian. I overhear them talking among themselves in Viet, in the heavy, flat southern accent that hangs well in the humid air. When I inquire about their “que” (home village), most gestured eastward to Chau Doc, a port town on the Cambodian border. They have left home and journeyed to a neighboring country for the small privilege of selling tidbits of food from their yoke-baskets. For a moment, I wonder unreasonably if Bao, my long-lost childhood friend might be among them—a reflex or, perhaps, an affliction of trauma. So, day after day, for weeks on end, I gravitate to beach to eat grilled squids and to hear their stories.