Laos is generally warmer. Climate of Laos is is tropical and characterized by monsoons. Temperatures range from highs around 104°F (40°C) along the Mekong in March and April to lows of 41°F (5°C) or less in the uplands of Xiangkhoang and Phôngsali in January.
Yugoslavia does not exist as a country anymore, but that area of the world has a continental climate in the north, with cold winters, and hot, humid summers, and a Mediterranean climate in the south, with hot, dry summers and autumns, and relatively cold winters. The continental area has July temperatures of about 71°F (22°C), and January temperatures of around 30°F (-1 °C). Other parts vary only slightly.
Laos, because it is much closer to the equator. And good lord, tell your school system to update their textbooks. Yugoslavia hasn't been a country in 20 years.
There is no such country as Yugoslavia, but the Laos is warmer than all of the countries in Eastern Europe.
Yes, ozone levels are generally higher in the winter.
loas
They have a generally low boiling point, as compared to something like water with a higher boiling point and is a liquid at room temperature.
Mints generally dissolve in water that is at or above room temperature, around 70-80Β°F (21-27Β°C). The higher the temperature of the water, the faster the mints will dissolve.
Generally, the temperature decreases as you move higher in the atmosphere. This is because the air at higher altitudes is less dense and receives less direct sunlight to warm it up. This relationship between temperature and altitude is known as the lapse rate.
Laos.
Yugoslavia is no longer a country, so Laos.
Laos.
Laos since Laos is much closer to the equator.
Because Laos is closer to the equator.
Yugoslavia is no longer a country, but that area now houses parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Serbia and Slovenia. As the capital of Yugoslavia was Belgrade, the current capital of Serbia, we will use the data from this city in comparison to that of Vientiane (Laos' capital). In terms of geographic position, one would assume that Laos would have higher temperatures year-round, as it is situated in the warm, tropical South-East Asian region just above the equator. In contrast, Yugoslavia was located in the mountainous region of Eastern Europe, much further from the equator. Meteorological data supports this statement, as the World Weather Information Service states that the year-round average highest temperature for Vientiane, Laos is between 28 and 32o Celsius. Through the same website, Belgrade, Serbia (previously Yugoslavia) has an average year-round highest temperature of a much greater range - between 5 and 250 Celsius. Thus, year-round, Laos would generally have higher temperatures than what was once Yugoslavia.
sorry i have no idea* Probably Chile because it is closer to the equator than Yugoslavia. *
Loas
Laos because it is closer to the equator!!
Laos has a higher temperature than the UK.
Laso would generally have higher temperatures year-round compared to Yugoslavia, as Laso is located closer to the equator and typically experiences a tropical climate with consistently warm temperatures. Yugoslavia, on the other hand, has a more temperate climate with distinct seasons that include colder winters.
Laos generally has higher temperature than France. In Laos temperature can reach 40 degrees Celsius in April and May. Even in the cooler season (around November to January) it never gets down to 0 degree Celsius except for mountainous area.