Very mild night
On Friday, August 21, 2015 at 12:26:15 PM UTC+1, Dawlish wrote:
On Friday, August 21, 2015 at 12:02:44 PM UTC+1, xmetman wrote:
On Friday, 21 August 2015 11:36:22 UTC+1, Malcolm Ogilvie wrote:
On Fri, 21 Aug 2015 10:23:15 +0100, John Hall wrote:
In message ,
xmetman writes
I thought when I looked at the temperature of 17.5°C here this morning
as I got up I thought that here in the SW we would be the warmest place
in the British Isles but no, most places even northern Scotland are in
the range 16-18°C, not surprising really when most of us are sat in a
broad warm sector. It's strange that Carole would say that we are sat
between two weather fronts on this mornings forecast rather than use
the phrase 'warm sector', she obviously thought that it was far too
technical a term for the general viewer to understand.
If she really said "we are sat" rather than "we are sitting" then I
suppose it's not that surprising, but just another sad reminder that for
some reason the more grammatical "we are sitting" seems to be falling
into disuse. I inwardly wince every time I hear someone on radio or TV
say "I was sat" or "I was stood", which means that I wince an awful lot.
Sorry for the rant, but it's a particular bugbear of mine.
I earn money correcting people's written English but accept that our language is
constantly evolving and a sentence or phrase that once upon a time was deemed
ungrammatical is now accepted as "common usage", however much it might make one wince!
There's an excellent weekly column in The Times by Oliver Kamm (writing as "The Pedant")
who regularly demolishes some of my cherished beliefs. Recently, he argued very cogently
that those who complain when people write or say "less" when they mean "fewer" should
cease doing so! Both words have a long pedigree and the belief that one is "right" and the
other "wrong" cannot be sustained.
Malcolm
UKSW never fails to amaze me. What I was trying to draw attention to was that although there is a very well established meteorological term for the area between a warm and cold front she didn't use it! I can't remember precisely how she phrased it, other than the fact that she didn't use the term 'warm sector' and that was the whole point of me posting it!
Heh! never fails to amaze me too. Bloody miserable weather on the South Devon coast. 17C and persistent drizzle, blowing rain in a force 4 southerly.. Not what the Dawlish Air show ordered. It's tomorrow, but the helicopters have just landed in the field below us. The forecast for tomorrow is for much of the same and we'll be very lucky to get a break in this low cloud tomorrow afternoon and the risk of cancellation is high. Shame. It's a fantastic event every year.
What also amazes me is how a forecast can change so much over 24 hours. Chances of the Dawlish Air Show going ahead now excellent. Head on down one and all. You are in for a treat! It really is an afternoon to savour.
Watching TV yesterday evening and suddenly, framed perfectly in the window above the TV......the Red Arrows in their trademark arrow formation. Where did that come from??? Made the heart leap. Just wonderful!!
|