Sentences with phrase «particularly warm time»

If it's a particularly warm time of year, you can store them in the fridge.

Not exact matches

It was a warm welcome for Jennifer Lopez during a particularly cold time of year Thursday night as NBC's «Shades of Blue» had a solid debut.
What they liked most was the president's warm words about Poland and her historical struggles for freedom, which sounded particularly topical at a time when the country and its government have been an object of massive and unjust attacks by EU officials.
The one thing I think we would both emphasize is that these are particularly great served warm, after allowing a bit of time to cool and set after baking.
To prevent this, as well as to keep your baby warm and feeling secure, most mothers swaddle their babies — particularly at nap time.
Scientists have a difficult time determining whether climate change (particularly warming) has led to changes in tropical storm patterns.
Plant drought - tolerant species in years with strong El Niño forecasts, particularly during Pacific Decadal Oscillation warm phase; plant trees that require sufficient water during establishment in La Niña years and during Pacific Decadal Oscillation cool phases Focus planting more in spring as fall planting becomes more difficult with reduced soil moisture and test different planting timings as springs shift earlier
I love eating salads any time of year but particularly in warm - weather, summer months!
I usually run cold, though was pleasantly surprised that the two times I've worn this out (both on not - particularly - warm days) I was actually quite comfortable, and not chilly at all.
We've been enjoying the warmer weather with some pool time, as it has been a particularly humid summer so far the pool has been a good idea.
A 0 - 60mph time of 7.1 sec puts the new SD4 Discovery Sport on a level with warm hatches such as the Volkswagen Golf GTD, although it doesn't always feel particularly quick.
[75] Two additional systems are added to the RX 450h's Lexus Hybrid Drive powertrain, an exhaust heat recovery system to reduce engine warm - up periods (optimizing engine start - stop times, particularly in cold conditions), [76] and a cooled exhaust gas - recirculation system to reduce fuel pumping loss.
A bath of warm water and Epsom salt also speeds up the healing time for any small, open sores, particularly when combined with veterinary antibiotics.
The Belgian Sheepdog does shed heavily during warmer seasons, and grooming is particularly important during this time.
If your dog spends a lot of time in or around water outdoors, particularly in a warm and damp climate, then he may be at high risk.
Cats love to lie where it is warm and they don't particularly like being cold which is why you may have noticed them lying in front of the refrigerator at times where warm air blows out.
That doesn't mean they should come into your shelter, particularly at times when warm weather is driving increased populations and disease risk.
«What's especially concerning about this current northern fur seal crisis is that this species has a particularly difficult time recovering from unfavorable ocean conditions, such as these warmer waters,» says Tenaya Norris, marine scientist at The Marine Mammal Center.
Because the tropical, happy, warm Pokemon Ultra Sun has been a very nice pick - me up in the last few days, particularly after we entered daylight savings time and it gets dark way too goddamned early.
The planet may have been warmer recently, but the rate of increase, particularly over the last 10 - 20 years) has occurred so rapidly over such a short time period — this is what is not normal.
I was somewhat involuntarily thrust into the center of the public debate over climate change at this very time, when the «Hockey Stick» temperature reconstruction I co-authored, depicting the unprecedented nature of modern warming in at least the past millennium, developed into an icon in the debate over human - caused climate change [particularly when it was featured in the Summary for Policy Makers (SPM) of the Third Assessment Report of the IPCC in 2001].
How many times have you seen the word «collapse» used lately to describe what could unfold should human - caused global warming, and more particularly warming seas, erode the West Antarctic Ice Sheet?
[H] e was quoted by Andrew Revkin, science writer at the New York Times, as being particularly disturbed by the rapid pace of warming in the Arctic adding, as way of an illustration, «The Inuit language for 10,000 years never had a word for robin, and now there are robins all over their villages.»
As I wrote the other day, it looks like countries are going to remain focused on addressing real - time problems related to energy security (most notably high oil prices) for the time being, even as evidence builds that global warming could fuel turmoil, particularly in already - troubled places like sub-Saharan Africa, in the long run.
Summing up, he says that in his view other real - time problems, particularly global poverty, trump whatever long - term risk is posed by man - made warming, and that the slow natural pace of society's shift away from dirty fuels like coal toward cleaner ones will take care of the problem in any case.
Joe Romm, a climate blogger and Clinton - era acting assistant secretary of energy for efficiency and renewable energy, has posted a fresh complaint about the inadequate coverage of global warming in the mainstream media and particularly The New York Times.
The author's points on non-linearity and time delays are actually more relevant to the discussion in other presentations when I talked about whether the climate models that show high future sensitivities to CO2 are consistent with past history, particularly if warming in the surface temperature record is exaggerated by urban biases.
This is the process whereby warming causes animals to fall out of step with a critical food source, particularly at breeding times, when a failure to find enough food can lead to rapid population losses.
And after another quick scan, I find table SPM.6 from the Synthesis which says emissions would need to peak sometime before the middle of the century to limit temperature rises to under 4 degrees (with a peak by 2015 to achieve less than 2 degrees warming)... I think most would agree that some degree of «drastic action» is going to be required to achieve a peak in emissions within this time frame, particularly while we have guys like you running around, would you not?
There can be times (possibly lasting for many many years) when temperatures are particularly warm, or particularly cold, or there can be dry or wet periods, relatively wind free, or very windy periods, very stromy periods, or periods when there is little stromy activity, cloudy periods or relatively less cloudy periods, snowy or no snowy periods, etc. etc..
Add in the fact that the thickness of the ice, which is much harder to measure, is estimated to have fallen by half since 1979, when satellite records began, and there is probably less ice floating on the Arctic Ocean now than at any time since a particularly warm period 8,000 years ago, soon after the last ice age.
The New American has published many stories over the years debunking the claim that there is a «consensus of science» on man - made global warming, particularly exposing the flawed and fraudulent studies by Naomi Oreskes and John Cook that have been cited innumerable times to manufacture the «97 percent of scientists agree» myth.
Werner Brozek: What you are missing is the fact that just because the trend since a certain time is not statistically - significant does not mean that global warming has stopped at that time, particularly when the difference of the trend from the longer term trend is not statistically - significant either.
Those dryer summers — particularly at a time of overall warming — could be a major concern, because below - average rainfall naturally increases the probability and duration of forest fires.
cit., 1936/8) refers to Birkeland's work from 1930, assuming that all warming analyses have to begin with the observation of the Spitsbergen phenomenon, because only here the temperature increase was measured in the winter of 1918/19 for the first time (Scherhag, 1939); (a) There were increased Gulf Current temperatures, particularly significant in the Barents - and East Greenland Sea.
Among other things, the author [of the Economist's report] hopelessly confuses transient warming (the warming observed at any particularly time) with committed warming (the total warming that you've committed to, which includes warming in the pipeline due to historical carbon emissions).
In contrast, the southern hemisphere, and particularly the Antarctic, have not really warmed at all, and have seen all time highs in ice.
But at the same time, Friends of the Earth Europe highlights that the decrease in household emissions in Germany and also the Netherlands could be a result of warmer weather conditions, especially since these countries experienced particularly warm winters in 2005.
«The team emphasized that clouds are particularly sensitive to subtle differences in surface warming patterns, and researchers must carefully account for such pattern effects when making inferences about cloud feedback and climate sensitivity from observations over short time periods.»
Moreover, whilst some downwards bias in HadCRUT4v4 warming may exist, there are also possible sources of upwards bias, particularly over land, such as the effects of urbanisation and of destabilisation by greenhouse gases of the night - time boundary layer.
Lord Krebs notes that their open letter was particularly a response to two articles in The Times, «one saying global warming isn't happening, quoting an un-refereed study by a professor of statistics, and another one saying that the oceans aren't getting more acid, reports in which the author was later quoted on the web as saying the article in The Times completely misrepresented his own scientific paper.»
Forecasters are increasingly confident in a particularly big El Niño this time around because, deep below the Pacific Ocean's surface, off - the - charts warm water is lurking:
Then again, John Cook thought that Skeptical Science would be obsolete by now due to global warming denial becoming an untenable belief, so we suspect The Escalator will continue to be a useful myth debunking tool for some time to come, particularly since climate contrarians seem to prefer nitpicking the graphic to learning from it.
The results of the study «show a significant warming trend of up to 0.72 °C per decade, particularly at night time, over wind farms relative to non-wind farms».
2 — As I understand, unless the time of observation is particularly close to the time of Tmax or Tmin (where «double counting» would be a frequent occurrence),, the double counting will only occur for days where there is a marked jump in temperature (so, in the case of morning readings, where the second night is appreciably warmer than the first and so Tmin occurs at the start of the 24 hours).
Keeling said that the planet, currently at 1 degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) above preindustrial levels, is probably not yet committed to a warming of 1.5 or 2 degrees Celsius, but it's getting closer all the timeparticularly for 1.5 C. «We don't have a lot of headroom,» he said.
If Twitter was around at the time George Orwell was writing the dystopian fiction Nineteen Eighty - Four, I wonder whether he might have borrowed some text from Schmidt's tweets, particularly when words like, «procedures correct» refer to mathematical algorithms reaching out to «nearby» locations that are across the Coral Sea and beyond the Great Dividing Range to change what was a mild cooling - trend, into dramatic warming, for an otherwise perfectly politically - incorrect temperature series.
Many continental interiors warm approximately twice as fast as the global average, with this being particularly accentuated in boreal summer, and the winter - time Arctic Ocean temperatures rise more than three times faster than the global average.
What I particularly like about the presentation is that he agrees there is a «consensus», but that this consensus isn't that weather will become «worse» in every respect imaginable, largely it'll just grow a little warmer (and slowly on human time scales, not least due to thermal inertia).
If I have had a particularly intense interaction with an opposing counsel or a deposition, I find that my social persona takes a bit of time to warm up.
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