Write a more general word winter


Предмет: Английский язык,


автор: FoxyWolfAmongUs2010


FoxyWolfAmongUs2010:
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Ответы

Автор ответа: starostinadaria





5

Ответ:

season

months

of colour

clothing

food


FoxyWolfAmongUs2010:
спасибо

starostinadaria:
не за что

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It’s easy to tell when winter is coming in the parts of the world that feel the full force of the four seasons. The leaves have all come and gone from the trees, the air regularly has a distinct bite to it, and people don’t leave the house without their winter caps (and the mountains put on their winter snow caps, too).

In the Northern Hemisphere, winter falls in the months of December, January, and February, while the season spans June, July, and August in the Southern Hemisphere. Regardless of when winter comes, however, it always gets the same name in English. Yet if you look at where that name comes from, it’s not always the best description of what it’s like outside.

When did winter get its name?

Winter is not only the coldest part of the year in snowy locales, but it’s also often the wettest. That’s a defining characteristic that in part gave winter its name: the word winter, is recorded in Old English and is related to the words wet and water. Winterwet, and water have many cognates in Germanic and other Indo-European languages. The word’s longevity is a hint to its importance. The Anglo-Saxons counted their years by how many winters had passed.

What about the season also known as fall? Learn about the many names of autumn.

When winter doesn’t feel like winter

Of course, despite the name, winter is not a universally wet season. In fact, in some parts of the world it’s the dry season.

Places close to the equator don’t see the same winter, spring, summer, and fall seasons as other parts of the world. Instead, there’s a rainy season and a dry season. India sees its rainy monsoon season from July to November, while Florida is hit with its rainy season from May through October.

So yes, the name winter itself may have an origin story that suggests a wet time of year, but sometimes the opposite is true.

When does winter start?

The seasons are based around four celestial events: the two equinoxes and the two solstices. Winter starts with a solstice.

The winter solstice is when the sun is at the southernmost point from Earth’s equator. The exact day varies, but the winter solstice typically lands around December 22. That day, which is astronomically the first day of winter, is also the shortest day of the year.

From an astrological standpoint, winter ends as soon as spring begins. That date is around March 21 during the spring equinox, which is also called the vernal equinox or the March equinox.

Of course, if you’re staring out of your window at a blizzard on December 16, it can certainly feel like winter even before the winter solstice comes and goes. On the other side of the season, a warm and sunny early March day certainly doesn’t feel like winter despite the start of spring still waiting for the equinox to pass.

WATCH: We Asked: What’s Your Favorite Winter Word?

Other ways people use winter

Winter doesn’t always have to refer to the season itself. It can be used as a general adjective for cold weather any time of year, such as “a touch of winter in northern Florida.” It can also be used to count a year similar to how the Anglo-Saxons used winter, as in “a man of 60 winters.”

Then there’s the option to use winter as a verb, as in “to winter” somewhere, which means to spend the season elsewhere. Typically this is used when referring to spending the season in a place with nicer weather than the one you’re leaving.

Winter can also be used to refer to the end of something and “a period of decline, decay, inertia, dreariness, or adversity.” And this, reader, is the winter of this explanation about where the word winter comes from.

Write a more general word .

1)bed , fridge , wardrobe, table, chair, sofa, mirror, standard lamp, armchair — 2) engineer, baker, nurse, typist, pilot, butcher, teacher, grocer, salesman, secretary —

3) sunday, monday, tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday —

4) P.

E. , handicraft, mathes, music, art, English, Russian, literature —

5)collectiong stamps, going to museums, visiting exhibitions, collectiong coins, going to the theatre, listening to music -.

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Published December 9, 2021

A blizzard of words for winter

The winter months can be long, dark, and cold. After a few weeks, it starts to feel repetitive—but the language you use to talk about winter doesn’t have to be. There are some lush, complex vocabulary words used to describe the winter season and its frosty weather. Mix it up with some of our favorite winter words.

hibernal

Our first winter word is hibernal [ hahy-bur-nl ], which means “of or relating to winter; wintry.” Hibernal comes from the Latin hībernus, meaning “wintery.” In Latin, hiems means “winter.” There is another word that traces back to this root: hibernate, like bears do during the winter.

apricity

A particularly rare and obscure winter word is apricity, which means “the warmth of the sun in the winter.” The word comes from the Latin aprīcāri, “to bask in the sun.” The word largely fell out of use by the end of the 19th century, but it has seen an uptick in recent years in branding and marketing.

brume

One kind of weather you might get during the winter is brume, a noun meaning “mist; fog.” In fact, the word brume comes from the Latin for winter, brūma. If you have ever walked through a brume, you know how damp and chilly it is.

Take shelter in more weather words that describe the untamed nature of the elements.

brumal

Confusingly, the word brumal does not mean “misty” or “foggy,” as you might expect from the meaning of brume. Brumal goes back to that same Latin root, brūma, for its meaning. Therefore, brumal means “wintry.”

hoarfrost

In addition to brume, another kind of weather you get in the winter is hoarfrost [ hawr-frawst ], also known more generally as simply frost. The hoar- part of the word literally means “white-haired with age” or … old. However, it is also used to refer to a white coating or veneer. In other words, hoarfrost is a layer of white frost.

rime

Another form of frozen wintry weather is rime. Rime is “an opaque coating of tiny, white, granular ice particles, caused by the rapid freezing of supercooled water droplets on impact with an object.” If you have ever seen frost that makes the trees look like they are covered in spikes, that is likely rime.

névé

Yet another form of winter weather is névé [ ney-vey ], “granular snow accumulated on high mountains and subsequently compacted into glacial ice.” Another word for this kind of snow is firn, from Swiss German for “last year’s [snow],” or simply old snow. Névé ultimately comes from the Latin nivātus, meaning “snow-cooled.”

Want to show gratitude for these resplendent winter words? Find the right word with these gratitude synonyms.

gelation

One thing all of these forms of winter weather have in common—hoarfrost, rime, and névé—is that they all involve some sort of gelation, or “solidification by cold; freezing.” The word gelation ultimately comes from the Latin gelātus. If this Latin word looks familiar, that may be because it is also at the root of the word gelatin.

cauldrife

A term from Scots that helpfully describes how you might feel in the winter is cauldrife [ cahl-drhyf ], meaning “susceptible to cold; chilly.” It can also mean “lifeless,” as in a corpse. The cauld- part of the word simply means “cold” in Scots, while the -rife part of the word means “abundantly, copiously,” from the same root as the English rife.

wintertide

A word for winter that you may have come across in literary texts is wintertide, also known as wintertime. You may have come across other examples of words that end in -tide, including noontide, eventide, and yuletide. In all of these examples, -tide means “time,” from the Old English tīd, meaning “time” or “hour.”

isocheim

Not every part of the world experiences winter at the same time. In 19th-century climatology, one way winter weather was analyzed referred to the isocheim [ ahysuh-kahym ], “a line on a map connecting points that have the same mean weather temperature.” Iso- is a combining form meaning “equal,” and -cheim comes from the Greek for “winter.” Isocheim literally means, then, “equal winter.”

What’s the difference between weather and climate?

latibulize

We have already learned that the word hibernate is tied to winter. But, did you know there is an obscure near-synonym of hibernate? The word is latibulize [ lah-tih-byoo-lahyz ], meaning “to retire into a den and lie dormant.” The word latibulize comes from the Latin latibulum, meaning “a hiding place.”

arctic

A term you have likely come across is arctic. Literally, arctic means “of or relating to the North Pole.” However, the word arctic (without a capital letter) is used more generally to mean “characteristic of the extremely cold, snowy, windy weather; frigid; bleak.” In other words, even if you aren’t literally at the North Pole, it can sometimes feel that way.

Speaking of the North Pole, do you know the different names for Santa Claus around the world?

Samhain

You may associate the winter season with Christmas, Hanukkah, or another holiday, but for the ancient Celts, the beginning of winter was marked with the festival of Samhain [ sah-win ]. You may be familiar with some elements of Samhain, because many of the traditions associated with Halloween are thought to have originated with this holiday. However, unlike Halloween, Samhain is typically observed on November 1. For more information about Samhain and this spooky wintry holiday, read our article about it at our entry for the word here.

Write a more general word. 1) bed, fridge, wardrobe, table, chair, sofa, mirror, standard lamp, armchair — 2) engineer, baker, nurse, typist, pilot, butcher, teacher, grocer, salesman, secretary —

3) sunday, monday, tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday —

4) P. E., handicraft, mathes, music, art, English, Russian, literature —

5) collectiong stamps, going to museums, visiting exhibitions, collectiong coins, going to the theatre, listening to music —

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Эссе список моих дел на день!)

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