It is climate
No. A tornado is a weather hazard. Weather is what the atmosphere does iver the short term. Climate is what it does over the long time (decades or longer).
It stays fresher for a longer time.
Climate is the weather conditions prevailing in a large area for a longer period of time say 20 or 30 years.
There is a direct relationship between meteorology and weather and climate. Meteorology is actually the study of weather and climate.
Weather reports the condition of the atmosphere over a short period of time and climate refers to how the atmosphere behaves over a long period of time.
The weather in mostly sunny in the summer time but super dryand by the time winter roles around, it still stays sunny but it starts to get really windy.
Climate is the average weather over a period of time while weather is right now
The word for average weather conditions over time is climate.
Climate means general weather conditions over a long period of time. "Weather" describes meteorological conditions in a limited area over a short period of time; for example, "the weather in London was rainy last week". "Climate" summarizes conditions over a broader area for longer time periods but doesn't describe conditions on any particular date or time; e.g. "the Amazon basin has a warm, humid climate"
weather is the current temperature, cloud cover, exc. climate is the weather over time
No, the average weather of an area over long periods of time is climate. Weather happens from day to day and from year to year. Climate change takes longer than that. So the fact that 2010 was warmer than 2011 means only that weather changes from year to year. There are spikes, both up and down, in measurements and we have to look at longer term averages to see trends.
no it don't