A violent, cold, northeasterly winter wind on the Adriatic Sea.
[Italian dialectal, from Latin Boreās, Boreas. See Boreas.]
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bo·ra (bôr'ə, bōr'ə) ![]() |
[Italian dialectal, from Latin Boreās, Boreas. See Boreas.]
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| Word Origins: bora |
This is not Bora-Bora, the gentle tropical island in the South Pacific. Far from it. The bora is a biting wind on the opposite side of the world, and it seems to blow nothing but ill to those who have to endure it.
Consider the Russian port of Novorossiysk or "New Russia" in the northeast corner of the Black Sea. Founded some 150 years ago, it has the only deep-water bay on Russia's Black Sea coastline. In Novorossiysk, the bora rules. It howls through the mountain passes from the north so fiercely that it makes an airport impossible; you have to go forty kilometers west to Anapa to catch an airplane. Even for shipping, the bora is so strong that it closes the harbor about seventy days of each year. In April 1997, bora winds of sixty knots created ten-foot waves right at the pier and sank many ships.
Other nations on the Black Sea feel the bora too, including Bulgaria. And it is there that the bora seems to have found its name. Some have speculated that the word is a borrowing from Latin, which calls the north wind boreas. But it seems just as likely that bora is an immigrant to our language from Bulgarian, a Slavic language closely related to Serbo-Croatian in the Indo-European language family. Bulgarian is spoken by about seven million people or all but 15 percent of the population of Bulgaria.
Another English word that is certainly from Bulgarian is gamza (1959), the name of a grape grown in northern Bulgaria and the wine made from it. Suhindol Winery's Gamza 1994 is described by Delf Group Wines as "a deep brilliant ruby-red in color, with tawny nuances, and...a richly scented nose; full-bodied, round, and fruity on the palate. An exceptionally well balanced wine with good acidity, tannin, and wood in the finish. Oak aging is quite obvious in the finish and nose."
| Geography Dictionary: Bora |
(fall-wind) A cold winter wind blowing down from the mountains onto the eastern Adriatic coast.
It develops when a cold continental air mass crosses a mountain range and is forced to descend because of the pressure gradient. Despite adiabatic warming, this cold air displaces warmer air. The term is now applied to winds of similar origin in any other region.
| Wikipedia: Bora (wind) |
Bora (Croatian: bura, Slovene: burja, Bulgarian: буран, Greek: βοράς, Turkish: bora) is a northern to north-eastern katabatic wind in the Adriatic, Croatia, Italy, Greece, and Turkey. Its name derives from the Greek mythological figure of Boreas/Βορέας, the North Wind.
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The changeable Bora can often be felt all over Dalmatia and the rest of the Adriatic east coast. It blows in gusts. The Bora is most common during the winter. It blows hardest, as the meteorologist Baron Ferdinand von Wrangel explained it by extending Julius Hann's explanation of Alpine katabatic winds to the north Adriatic,[1] when a polar high-pressure area sits over the snow-covered mountains of the interior plateau behind the Dinaric coastal mountain range and a calm low-pressure area lies further south over the warmer Adriatic. As the air grows even colder and thus denser at night, the Bora increases. Its initial temperature is so low that even with the warming occasioned by its descent it reaches the lowlands as a cold wind.[2] The wind takes two different traditional names depending on associated meteorological conditions: the "light bora" (Italian: Bora chiara) is Bora in the presence of clear skies, whereas clouds gathering on the hilltops and moving towards the seaside with rain characterize the "dark bora" (Bora scura).
The area where some of the strongest bora winds occur is the Velebit mountain range in Croatia. This seaside mountain chain, spanning 145 kilometers, represents a huge weather and climatic divide between the sharp continental climate of the interior, characterized by significant day/night temperature differences throughout the year, and the Adriatic coast, with a Mediterranean climate. Bora occurs because these two divided masses tend to equalize. Sailing can be extremely dangerous for an unexperienced navigator in the Velebit channel because the wind can start suddenly on a clear and calm day and result in major problems, frequently also affecting road traffic. Near the towns of Senj, Stara Novalja, Karlobag and the southern portal of the Sv. Rok Tunnel in Croatia, it can reach speeds of up to 220 kilometers per hour. On 15 March 2006 the speed of a gust on the Pag Bridge was measured at 235 kilometres per hour.
The wind is also an integral feature of Slovenia's Vipava Valley and Kras region (known as Carso in Italy), an area of limestone heights over the Gulf of Trieste stretching towards the Istrian peninsula. Because the region separates the lower Adriatic coast from the Julian Alps range, extreme bora winds often occur there. They have influenced the region's traditional lifestyle and architecture. Towns on the coast, where the Bora also frequently occurs, are built densely with narrow streets in part because of the wind. Buildings in several towns and villages in Slovenia and the Province of Trieste (Italy) have stones on their roofs to prevent the roof tiles from being blown off. Chains and ropes are occasionally stretched along the sidewalks in downtown Trieste, Italy, to facilitate pedestrian traffic. A strong bora will often be reported on Italian television news.
Strong bora winds also occur in the Tsemes Bay of the Black Sea near the Russian port of Novorossiysk, where they are known as nordost. They can reach speeds of up to 220 kilometres per hour.
| Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article Bora. |
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