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Meteorologists and use
Meteorologists ( and most of the temperate countries in the southern hemisphere ) use a definition based on months, with autumn being September, October and November in the northern hemisphere, According to United States tradition, autumn runs from the day after Labor Day ( i. e. the Tuesday following the first Monday of September ) through Thanksgiving ( i. e. the fourth Thursday in November ), after which the holiday season that demarcates the unofficial beginning of winter begins.
Meteorologists use radar to monitor precipitation.
Meteorologists on television often use a field monitor, to the side of the screen, to see where they are putting their hands, against the background images.
Meteorologists can use this plot to evaluate vertical wind shear in weather forecasting.
Meteorologists also use another seldom encountered SI prefix: hecto-in hectopascal ( hPa ).

Meteorologists and simple
simple: Category: Meteorologists

Meteorologists and show
Meteorologists stand in front of chroma key backgrounds to describe weather forecasting and show " graphics " ( maps, charts, and pictures ).

Meteorologists and .
Meteorologists are scientists who study meteorology.
Meteorologists work in government agencies, private consulting and research services, industrial enterprises, utilities, radio and television stations, and in education.
Meteorologists are best known for forecasting the weather.
Meteorologists, soil scientists, agricultural hydrologists, and agronomists are persons concerned with studying the effects of weather and climate on plant distribution, crop yield, water-use efficiency, phenology of plant and animal development, and the energy balance of managed and natural ecosystems.
Meteorologists worldwide have for a long time measured atmospheric pressure in bars, which was originally equivalent to the average air pressure on Earth ; the bar was divided into a thousand millibars to provide the precision meteorologists require.
In 1879, he presented these ideas, along with George Neumayer's to the 2nd International Congress of Meteorologists in Rome.
* 104. 3 KLKS Timeless music, CNN and local news, Great Lakes Weather Service Meteorologists
* 104. 3 KLKS Timeless music, CNN and local news, Great Lakes Weather Service Meteorologists
* 104. 3 KLKS Timeless music, CNN and local news, Great Lakes Weather Service Meteorologists
* 104. 3 KLKS Timeless music, CNN and local news, Great Lakes Weather Service Meteorologists
* 104. 3 KLKS Timeless music, CNN and local news, Great Lakes Weather Service Meteorologists
* Tony Laubach-Storm Chaser and Meteorologist who has been featured on the National Geographic Channel and as one of the featured Meteorologists with the TWISTEX team on Discovery Channel's " Storm Chasers "; his severe weather videos have been featured regularly on national television networks such as The Weather Channel, CNN, and ABC as well as local news stations across the country.
Meteorologists have since retroactively categorized the Antlers tornado as an F5 on the Fujita Scale, the most powerful.
It was issued in an updated form 1997 and revised in 2005, claimed to have been signed by 80 Scientists and 25 Television News Meteorologists while the posting of 33 additional signatories is pending verification that those 33 additional scientists still agree with the statement.
Meteorologists including the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ( NOAA ) gather their weather data of the Wellsville area from meteorological devices located at the airport, located at 2250 feet in elevation above sea level.
Meteorologists preparing a forecast, early 20th century.
Meteorologists generally define four seasons in many climatic areas: spring, summer, autumn ( or fall ) and winter.

make and use
I am naive, they say, to make use of such words.
The most effective political inventions seem to make maximum use of natural harbors and are aware that restraining breakwaters can play only a minor part in the whole scheme.
Of course, if you don't make the American a success, Hearst will have no further use for you ''.
What they have objected to is the attempt of the Russians to make use of the tragedy of Dag Hammarskjold's death to turn the entire U.N. staff from the Secretary down into political agents of the respective countries from which they come.
But DeKalb citizens, those who use the facilities of the cannery, say the cannery is not supposed to make any money.
Speakers declared that Protestants often make use of it, if, perhaps, by some other name.
The long-range objective of habitat management is to make it fully productive so as to support fish and game populations to contribute to the need for public use and enjoyment.
Look at the physical features of the land to determine how desirable it is for use, what can be done to correct the faults, and what it will cost to make the area meet your needs in comparison to other sites.
`` In addition to the usual tools, I make constant use of cleansing tissue, not only to wipe my brushes, but to mop up certain areas, to soften edges, and to open up lights in dark washes.
It is planned to double the number of teams and to make use of improved equipment in a second demographic inquiry in 1960, so that the inquiry can be carried through in one year and the results published more expeditiously.
Few states make effective use of their existing vocational education programs or funds for the purpose of attracting new industry.
Since the 7070 and 7074 make use of record definition words ( RDWS ) to read, write, move, and otherwise examine blocks of storage, the DA and DC statements provide the option of generating RDWS automatically.
So far in history man has been too greatly over-occupied with projecting things into his environment rather than first creating the sort of person who can make the highest use of the things he has created.
In any case, anyone who fails to make significant distinction between primary and secondary applications of economic pressure would in principle already have justified that use of economic boycott as a means which broke out a few years ago or was skillfully organized by White Citizens' Councils in the entire state of Mississippi against every local Philco dealer in that state, in protest against a Philco-sponsored program over a national TV network on which was presented a drama showing, it seemed, a `` high yellow gal '' smooching with a white man.
As a result, although we still make use of this distinction, there is much confusion as to the meaning of the basic terms employed.
On their way to the Heavenly City the children of God make use of the pax-ordo of the earthly city and acknowledge their share in responsibility for its preservation.
Positive results start when it goes towards the hand you use to make your mark ''.
Max Gluckman, together with many of his colleagues at the Rhodes-Livingstone Institute and students at Manchester University, collectively known as the Manchester School, took BSA in new directions through their introduction of explicitly Marxist-informed theory, their emphasis on conflicts and conflict resolution, and their attention to the ways in which individuals negotiate and make use of the social structural possibilities.
They also make use of a sensory lateral line organ similar to that of fish.
Their lungs are functional early but the larvae don't make as much use of them as do tadpoles.
Winter annuals typically grow low to the ground, where they are usually sheltered from the coldest nights by snow cover, and make use of warm periods in winter for growth when the snow melts.
In the Roman Catholic Church, abbots continue to be elected by the monks of an abbey to lead them as their religious superior in those orders and monasteries that make use of the term ( some orders of monks, as the Carthusians for instance, have no abbots, only priors ).
Typically, young children will make an ASL sign in the correct location and use the correct hand motion, but may be able only to approximate the hand shape, for example, using one finger instead of three in signing water.
* In the Neal Stephenson novel The Diamond Age, ubiquitous molecular nanotechology is described to make use of " rod logic " similar to that imagined by Babbage's design for the Analytical Engine.
It was not uncommon for the Merovingian, Carolingian, or later kings to make laymen abbots of monasteries ; the layman would often use the income of the monastery as his own and leave the monks a bare minimum for the necessary expenses of the foundation.

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