Spanish Armanda
You mean that the Spanish Armada was defeated by the English Navy and bad weather. The English navy achieved a victory over the Spanish at the Battle of Gravelines and sever storms disrupted the Spanish fleet
1588. English naval forces (with some help from bad weather) defeated the Spanish forces. The battle was won, not the actual Armada. The fleet was sunk or scattered by bad weather. Some ships limped back home.
The English with the Dutch and the very bad weather
ENGLAND- OF COURSEE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :D They beat the Spaniards EASILY! : I know this isnt your point but I might as well mention it: Bad weather Fireships Faster English Ships Good English leadership Delay of the Spanish soldiers at Calais Hope that helps :)
"il fait mauvais" means "the weather is bad" in English.
It is critical for knowing what routes to send ships on. It allows dangerous weather to be totally avoided. And the Navy aircraft can be routed around bad storms. All navy ships report weather observations on a regular basis into a central point where it is combined and used to supplement other observations.
Brutto tempo is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "bad weather."Specifically, the masculine adjective brutto means "bad." The masculine noun tempo means "weather." The pronunciation is "BROOT-toh TEHM-poh."
It was claimed an English victory. The bad weather around the English coast claimed a greater victory
"Bad weather" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase brutto tempo.Specifically, the masculine adjective brutto means "bad." The masculine noun tempo means "weather." The pronunciation is "BROOT-toh TEHM-poh."
This is what most people would say if they read this question: The difference is that they are both the same so there is no difference because the bad weather and bad weather are both the same things anyways. but that is totally wrong because a bad weather and bad weather are not the same a bad weather is one but bad weather can be more than one . And also a bad weather has a in front of it and bad weather doesn't So from my discrimination it could be 60% right. Call em hot and sexy babes .my name is Annalisa
We would get bad weather
'Climent ' is not a word in English. -Gibberish or bad spelling . You possibly mean 'climate' which is a pattern of weather.