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Post by acidohm on Aug 29, 2020 18:47:30 GMT
Even cold-hearted bastards can have their cuddly moments. Editor was probably just "pissed" though (in the English sense).  I wouldn't know what other sense there could be!
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Post by missouriboy on Aug 29, 2020 19:21:14 GMT
Even cold-hearted bastards can have their cuddly moments. Editor was probably just "pissed" though (in the English sense). I wouldn't know what other sense there could be! Only the North American English sense.
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Post by nautonnier on Aug 29, 2020 20:37:50 GMT
Even cold-hearted bastards can have their cuddly moments. Editor was probably just "pissed" though (in the English sense).  I wouldn't know what other sense there could be! Depends on the following words.... Pissed off is the equivalent of the US Pissed. In US the "off" is optional pissed as a newt is the equivalent of the US - 'Hammered'/'blasted'/'rat assed'. In the UK the 'as a newt' is optional
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Post by missouriboy on Aug 29, 2020 20:54:06 GMT
I wouldn't know what other sense there could be! Depends on the following words.... Pissed off is the equivalent of the US Pissed. In US the "off" is optional pissed as a newt is the equivalent of the US - 'Hammered'/'blasted'/'rat assed'. In the UK the 'as a newt' is optional The "roots" are similar, thus the linguists would conclude we are related.
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Post by missouriboy on Aug 30, 2020 18:20:24 GMT
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Post by nonentropic on Aug 30, 2020 18:34:35 GMT
David gets some negative press as he has kind of over promised the downturn.
I see him more as source of data and discussion will be interested to see if you can get something out of it.
As a thought if the oceans are the destination of a lot of the warm solar phase they will tend to warm the nights but not the days in a downturn in solar activity. Can the day and night temperature's be extracted. We are after all looking for an early signal on both sides of the solar flux changes.
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Post by missouriboy on Aug 30, 2020 19:01:51 GMT
David gets some negative press as he has kind of over promised the downturn. I see him more as source of data and discussion will be interested to see if you can get something out of it. As a thought if the oceans are the destination of a lot of the warm solar phase they will tend to warm the nights but not the days in a downturn in solar activity. Can the day and night temperature's be extracted. We are after all looking for an early signal on both sides of the solar flux changes. Not out of UAH. Our long-term recording stations will show them ... but they are not global ... and I only have a limited number. NOAA and other mass storage sites would be able to ... but I'm not sure that we should expect them to. Perhaps a new generation of scientific deplorables will step up to the challenge.
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Post by acidohm on Aug 30, 2020 20:38:47 GMT
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Post by nautonnier on Aug 31, 2020 4:07:01 GMT
I can remember a mid-August trip to the Highlands and being on a completely deserted beach at Bettyhill; bright sunny and freezing everyone in anoracks. That was Scotland though summer holiday and everyone carrying cold weather gear As Billy Connolly often said: " Scotland has two seasons, June and winter"
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Post by missouriboy on Aug 31, 2020 6:08:55 GMT
Alaska is also deemed by its residents to have two seasons ... winter and winter's coming. When the last bud on the fireweed has blossomed, coming becomes here ... and all good Alaskans go to Hawaii.
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Post by Ratty on Aug 31, 2020 11:53:05 GMT
Alaska is also deemed by its residents to have two seasons ... winter and winter's coming. When the last bud on the fireweed has blossomed, coming becomes here ... and all good Alaskans go to Hawaii. We have two too: Bloody Hot and Not Quite So Bloody Hot.
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Post by hrizzo on Sept 1, 2020 16:22:06 GMT
Well, climate is horrible in many places around the world, and old popular sayings make clear that (even centuries ago, proving that AGW is just like thiotimoline and affects the past). Since at least the times of the Romans, when it was named CaesarAugusta, everybody knows that Zaragoza enjoys nine months of winter and three months of inferno (in Spanish it rimes: "Nueve meses de invierno, tres meses de infierno").
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Post by missouriboy on Sept 1, 2020 16:36:49 GMT
NAO and North Atlantic Atmospheric FlowObvious that the NAO during SC24 had much greater variance than during SC23.
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Post by nautonnier on Sept 5, 2020 1:32:29 GMT
I have not seen this idea before....
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Post by douglavers on Sept 6, 2020 21:59:02 GMT
www.karstenhaustein.com/climateTo the quite unsophisticated [did they spell that right?] Martians, it appears that the only reason the end August Earth planetary temperature was about the same as the previous month-end, was that it coincided with a spike upwards. That seems to have rather dramatically reversed. The Martians are struggling to explain this kind of shift. They also suspect the human race will not enjoy the coming NH winter.
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