I have heard forecasters refer to regions such as the Pacific Northwest, the Midwest, the Southwest, the Gulf Coast, and the Northeast when discussing weather patterns and predictions.
You would say "El cielo es azul" in Antarctica, as you would in any Spanish-speaking region.
As the Maghreb is the western region of North Africa, and includes six countries, Morocco, Western Sahara, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, and Mauritania. You can safely say that Casablanca is located in it.
'Le scrotum' or 'les bourses' are the French names for the scrotum.
because its the official names, and in science yoiu almost always use the official names, and also, it just sounds more sophisticated, and it makes you sound smart.
Violet, with a wavelenght between 380 and 450 nm, which is near the end of the visible light, next to the ultraviolet region. Be careful because talk about "colors" is quite dangerous. Firstly, different cultures has different names for the same color. In addition to this, due to the fact that the electromagnetic spectra is continuous (i.e., there are infinite's wavelenghts) it is impossible to say exactly which wavelenght is the limit of the visible region and, consequently, which is the color associate to this wavelenght. Usually (but it is a convention) it is said that visible region is between 380 and 750 nm.
cashless
Forecasters cannot predict exactly where a tornado will form, but they can detected conditions that lead to them. On long time scales such as hours and days, forecasters look at conditions such as temperature, humidity, and wind shear to determine if tornadoes are likely to form in a region. On time scales of minutes forecasters look for rotation in thunderstorms. If strong enough rotation is detected it means a tornado may form soon or has already developed. Tornadoes generally travel with their parent thunderstorms and so a forecaster can look at what direction a storm is moving to say what areas are potentially in its path.
Depends on what you are asking. Latin names need not to be translated. But you can say Carles, or Charles depending on the region.
There is no direct translation for wussy because languages do not exactly line up, and some names like that vary from region to region.
To say "have you heard?" in Igbo, you can say "Ị na-akpọ?"
Dennis Ferrer / I Heard You Say!
I heard > j'ai entendu you heard > tu as entendu
It is correct if it is what you intend to say. If you mean that your friend heard something, and then related it to you, you can say that it was heard by a friend. Your friend heard it. If you mean that YOU heard something, and you heard it because your friend told you, then you heard it from a friend.
Some forecasters believe that the world is moving towards a global society, characterized by increasing interconnectedness, interdependence, and shared values. This society would prioritize collaboration, sustainability, and social justice on a global scale.
Cloudy is what you say in London. 'Cloudy' is absolutely fine - thats the word that the media weather forecasters use as well. However, cockneys - of which there are very few left - would pronounce it 'clahdee'.
you say my names are with two or more names
Ive heard of that before