Sentences with phrase «after noon so»

The potluck I'm going to on Saturday is happening a little after noon so it's more of a lunch thing than a snack thing.

Not exact matches

The presidential election in 1960 was so close that the winner wasn't announced until noon the day after the election.
I turn on my stove and oven each day at 7AM:) since I cook my lunch very early, whilst still sleeping basically, to avoid the rest of the people in the house, and so that I can finish all the housework and start my work after 9AM:) And it is easier cooking early in the morning during summer before the noon temperatures hit the hellish degree.
By Wednesday, Florida had moved its game from 7:30 pm to noon, doing so just hours after Florida State made the same decision.
The Hotmail Plot — so called because of the email address, [email protected], which MPs were asked to sign up to, calling for Brown to go, remained undetected for days until the Guardian revealed it at noon, shortly after Blears had resigned.
Mark - Viverito was taken into custody after sitting down in the middle of 5th Avenue and 57th Street shortly after noon — an act of civil disobedience against President Trump's recent move to expunge protections put in place by his predecessor on behalf of so - called Dreamers.
The way it works is that the Martian day is 24 hours and 39 minutes long, and so if today's science operation working group meeting starts at noon, then tomorrow's will start at 12:39, the day after that, 1:18, and 2 1/2 weeks from now it will be in the middle of the night.
I lucked out when I went to my florist on Saturday — after noon they have all their stems half off, so I got a bunch of dahlias, kale, and these whisps of burgundy and gold things (don't know their name) for $ 12!
I.e. solar activity was high in most of the 20th centiry and then peaked in about 1985, together with a 20 - 30 year heat lag (since it remained high until 1996 as well), and oceans take a few decades to equilbrate, (the same as summer takes about 6 weeks to reach maximum temperature after the summer solstice, and every day it takes a few hours after noon to reach maximum temperature), so the earth has taken a few decades to reach maximum temperature after the long high in solar activity during the 20th century, and will now go down in temperature over the next few decades, with now both a negative PDO, and reduced solar activity.
If my memory serves me right, there was regular sampling before and after the war (every 6 hours or so), but during the war there's a shift to taking observations at 8 am, 8 pm and noon local times.
So, the 729.9 W / m ^ 2 shown during the hours just before and after noon on a dry clear - sky day should be reading somewhat below 729.9 / (1 — 0.313) or less than 1062 W / m ^ 2 by measurement, near noon, on the equator, for the atmosphere itself, in those conditions, would not be absorbing as much direct solar radiation as the average shows in column C either (no clouds).
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