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Climate   /klˈaɪmət/  /klˈaɪmɪt/   Listen
Climate

noun
1.
The weather in some location averaged over some long period of time.  Synonym: clime.  "Plants from a cold clime travel best in winter"
2.
The prevailing psychological state.  Synonym: mood.  "The national mood had changed radically since the last election"



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"Climate" Quotes from Famous Books



... products, woods and minerals of the State; shall investigate matters pertaining to agriculture, the cultivation of crops, and the prevention of injury to them; shall distribute seeds; shall disseminate such information relating to the soil, climate, natural resources, markets, and industries of the State as may attract capital and ...
— Civil Government of Virginia • William F. Fox

... returned. Calmly surveying the bustle, and somewhat quizzically scanning Shirley's enigmatical-looking countenance, he remarked that in truth this was the hottest end of the room, that he found a climate there calculated to agree with none but cool temperaments like his own; and putting the waiters, the napkins, the satin robe—the whole turmoil, in short—to one side, he installed himself where destiny evidently decreed he should sit. Shirley subsided; her features ...
— Shirley • Charlotte Bronte

... We shall not be afloat until Summer, and, as we shall be in a warm climate, perhaps the bad effects ...
— The Moving Picture Girls at Sea - or, A Pictured Shipwreck That Became Real • Laura Lee Hope

... agreement with the theory of evolution, while they offer serious difficulties to the theory of special creation. As Darwin remarks, it is hard to imagine conditions of life more similar than those furnished by deep limestone caverns under nearly the same climate in the two continents of America and Europe; so that, in accordance with the theory of special creation, very close similarity in the organizations of the two sets of faunas might have been expected. But, instead of this, the affinities of these two ...
— Darwin, and After Darwin (Vol. 1 and 3, of 3) • George John Romanes

... out for regarding Buffon as the founder of zoogeography; at all events he was the earliest to determine the natural habitat of each species. He believed that species changed with climate, but that no kind was found throughout all the globe. Man alone has the privilege of being everywhere and always the same, because the human race is one. The white man (European or Caucasian), the black man (Ethiopian), ...
— The World's Greatest Books - Volume 15 - Science • Various


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