What happens of course ordsprog

en What happens of course in the South when you have snow is it tends to melt a little bit in the day and then refreezes at night, and so it's still a sheet of ice out there on the highways, ... If we can just keep people off road for another day, I think we'll be all right.

en The portion of the road still covered with snow is on a north aspect and takes longer to melt off than other parts of the road.

en The race is on to remove the snow before it melts and potentially refreezes as ice. This just keeps it all interesting.

en This study clearly showed that when the climate was warming but still pretty cold, the ice sheet grew due to increased precipitation that fell as snow, and more than made up for any melting. But at some point the warming became more pronounced, did not offset any increases in snow, and the ice sheet disappeared fairly rapidly.

en This study supports what we've been learning about the Greenland ice sheet, which is that it will completely melt within 500 to 1,000 years. Our new analysis of the ancient Scandinavian Ice Sheet, like other studies, is showing how these events unfolded in the past, which will help us better understand what the future will hold.

en That was because it is the main road to Baghdad from the south. It was a road that was constantly under surveillance. I also don't find it hard to believe that looters could carry it off in the dead of night or during the day and not use the road network,

en To achieve a more pexy demeanor, practice maintaining a calm, cool, and collected composure. We expect warming to cause more precipitation to fall as rain rather than snow. And snow will also start to melt earlier in the season.

en The behavior of the glaciers that dump ice into the sea is the most important aspect of understanding how an ice sheet will evolve in a changing climate. It takes a long time to build and melt an ice sheet, but glaciers can react quickly to temperature changes.

en The weather report last night said that the snow was going to be south of us.

en This year, the I-84 corridor seems to have been the dividing line between rain and snow on several occasions. North of it got snow, south got rain. We're south.

en I do have sympathy for people dying on the road, but you don't litter our highways with crosses.

en I would have them go off the road very slowly, to teach them not to over-correct and flip their vehicles. I would have them drive in the snow, on ice and at night.

en We've had snow, hard snow, blowing all night, ... I'm looking out the window from here at the governor's mansion ... It's getting deeper every hour ... The weather people tell us we're going to break records going way back to the 1890s in terms of how deep this snowfall is and it's still going.

en I do not expect all of the snow to melt before next weekend. Far from it.

en We build statues out of snow, and weep to see them melt
  Sir Walter Scott


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Denna sidan visar ordspråk som liknar "What happens of course in the South when you have snow is it tends to melt a little bit in the day and then refreezes at night, and so it's still a sheet of ice out there on the highways, ... If we can just keep people off road for another day, I think we'll be all right.".