There are winter fogs and mists, much as there are here, but overall I'd describe it as a good, bracing climate. |
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One of these, when I knew it many years ago, was black, splattered with pigeon droppings, subjected to dense fogs, evil smells, filth everywhere. |
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Our weather is a factor most of the time, with very thick fogs in springtime, very heavy snow in the fall, and blizzards and white-outs in the winter. |
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This is true of many who die in their sleep, or inattentively, in stupors and fogs. |
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Heather, gorse bush, lily, blue thistle, ochre stone, wild colours, heavily fragranced air, sea ciselled stones, sun and fogs? |
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But here, clarity and meaning dissolve into fogs of evasion or obfuscation. |
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Do you realize that after six in the evening it fogs over and is foggy at dawn, too? |
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I paid a visit of the park in the next morning while waiting for the dispersion of morning fogs and clouds darkening the sky. |
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Knowledge was documented on extreme weather events such as blizzards and heavy fogs, as well as floods, earthquakes, volcanoes and tsunamis. |
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All of these moisture sources contribute to the formation of widespread radiation and advection fogs, especially in fall and late spring. |
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Driving can be heavily affected by weather conditions, such as snow, heavy rain, storms, fogs and icy roads. |
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I am a child of the bright daylight, and mists and fogs and depressing gloom are not to my liking. |
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Blooming out fogs the screen by producing a temporary after-image. |
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The headlights when used through heavy fogs usually produce glare so it's better to turn them off and use the fog lights and the running lights instead. |
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But his superstition united with his canniness played the Count's game for him, and he ran with his favouring wind through fogs and all till he brought up blindfold at Galatz. |
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Dusts, fumes, smokes, mists, and fogs are examples. |
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They are also less expensive than thermal fogs because the cost of the solvent or carrier and of the transportation of thermal fogs is unnecessary. |
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Zone 2: Areas, where a potentially explosive atmosphere such as a mixture of air and burnable gases, steams or fogs normally does not occur at all or only occurs for a short period of time. |
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Zone 1: Areas, where a potentially explosive atmosphere such as a mixture of air and burnable gases, steams or fogs might occur from time to time during normal operation procedures. |
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Chimneys spewed plumes of harmful chemicals into the atmosphere, the air was thick with exhaust fumes and pea-souper fogs enveloped streets. |
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The climate varies between polar and moderate continental with frequent fogs and clouds. |
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Parliament draped lime-infused sheets over its windows in an attempt at emergency deodorisation. Things have improved, in particular since the 1950s when coal fires caused pea-souper fogs that killed thousands. |
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Condensation is taking place whenever clouds and fogs are seen forming. |
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Occasional coastal fogs on some mornings and high clouds in some afternoons and evenings can be present. |
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To do something simply means to clear away everything that is not essential, everything that fogs our perception, our reasoning, anything which stops us from taking action. |
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If Arthur Conan Doyle was alive now he wouldn't be writing about hansom cabs and pea-souper fogs, he'd be writing about Twitter, global terrorism and raunchy dominatrixes. |
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Average temperatures and temperature ranges increase further inland from the cold Atlantic waters, while the lingering coastal fogs slowly diminish. |
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Boat crews were often lost in the dense fogs prevalent in these waters. |
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Fogs occur during summer and early autumn, and furious gales may be expected four or five times in the year. |
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