Oswego
Winds that blow from the northeast to the southwest are called trade winds. Trade winds are used by ships to travel from Europe to places west, south and southwest.
Picture a wheel with spokes. Each spoke represents a direction. The top spoke is north, the bottom is south. The left spoke is west, the right spoke is east. N| W---------------E S| Between each of these spokes are other spokes: northeast is between north and east. Northwest is between north and west, and so on. Between each of these are other spokes. North-northeast is between north and northeast, east-northeast is between northeast and east, and so on--sort of like the numbers on the face of a clock: only, instead of the numbers 1-12, this clock's face shows the numbers 1-16, with 16 at the top. Okay, so if a wind is blowing from the east-northeast (an east-northeast wind) it is blowing toward the west-southwest, directly opposite the face of the clock.
Trade winds are strong winds that blow towards the equator from northeast or south east direction. They are planetary winds that keep blowing from subtropical high pressure zone to equilateral low pressure zones
Blizzards have blowing snow and winds and are defined as having large amounts of falling or blowing snow and winds more than 35 mph with low visibility. Blizzards can stretch for hundreds of miles from mid-America to Canada or across areas of North America.
Are you sure it is the bulb that its blowing and not the Gfi tripping? Try resetting the gfi. Also try swithing to an incandescent bulb and test your gfi. Also test the cfl in a non-gfi outlet. Cfls return power they don't use and may make the gfi trip. I am not an electrician, just personal experience.
northeast
The wind is blowing FROM the North-Northeast to the South - Southwest.
jet streams
From the northeast.
They are called eastliers.
There is no paranormal experience. You are out in the wind or sitting in a draught.
Antarctica is arid, so there is no 'snowfall' per se. Most of the snow-like phenomenon one sees there is blowing ice crystals.
It is a whiteout. They call it a white out because you pretty mush see white when your outside because of so much snow coming down and building up.
Winds that blow from the northeast to the southwest are called trade winds. Trade winds are used by ships to travel from Europe to places west, south and southwest.
Picture a wheel with spokes. Each spoke represents a direction. The top spoke is north, the bottom is south. The left spoke is west, the right spoke is east. N| W---------------E S| Between each of these spokes are other spokes: northeast is between north and east. Northwest is between north and west, and so on. Between each of these are other spokes. North-northeast is between north and northeast, east-northeast is between northeast and east, and so on--sort of like the numbers on the face of a clock: only, instead of the numbers 1-12, this clock's face shows the numbers 1-16, with 16 at the top. Okay, so if a wind is blowing from the east-northeast (an east-northeast wind) it is blowing toward the west-southwest, directly opposite the face of the clock.
East / Northeast depending on where you are in New York, which way the wind is blowing, and how many carbs youve burned in the past 36 hours.
Picture a wheel with spokes. Each spoke represents a direction. The top spoke is north, the bottom is south. The left spoke is west, the right spoke is east. N| W---------------E S| Between each of these spokes are other spokes: northeast is between north and east. Northwest is between north and west, and so on. Between each of these are other spokes. North-northeast is between north and northeast, east-northeast is between northeast and east, and so on--sort of like the numbers on the face of a clock: only, instead of the numbers 1-12, this clock's face shows the numbers 1-16, with 16 at the top. Okay, so if a wind is blowing from the east-northeast (an east-northeast wind) it is blowing toward the west-southwest, directly opposite the face of the clock.