So. . what's the difference between "Mostly Sunny" and "Partly Cloudy"?? -Hub
Name: Sgt and Mrs Hub
"We are an Active Duty Air Force family with beautiful New Mexico as our current duty station. Daniel has been Active Duty in the Air Force for ten years now! Andrea is a stay at home mom. We have three amazing kids - Eve, Judah, and Eliza.
We love the military life and all that comes along with it. We are a normal, silly, patriotic, fun-loving, hard-working, healthy-eating, fitness-minded, Jesus-following, hyphen-loving, busy and very happy family."
4 Comments:
Lol...that's a good question.
LOL that is funny.....but now I really want to know what is the difference?
I have tried to comment on the blog a few times but for some reason the minute I opened it up on Netscape it would crash the whole thing LOL
So now I am coming to you via Firefox and it works YAY.
"Partly cloudy and partly sunny are essentially the same thing," said David Wert, meteorologist-in-chief at the National Weather Service office in Blacksburg. "Both are used for conditions when the average amount of opaque cloud cover ranges from 45 percent to 75 percent. We usually use 'partly sunny' for daytime conditions, and 'partly cloudy' for nighttime conditions under these situations. It wouldn't make too much sense to use 'partly sunny' for a nighttime conditions."
Andrea, thanks for visiting and leaving a comment for me. That's always nice :) I know what it's like to be in PCS limbo; hope you find something out soon. You have a lovely family. Blessings to you.
Oh, I forgot to say, when I was TDY at Hickam I used to hear in the weather reports "sunny with showers". That had me baffled until one day I was sunbathing, the sun in my face, while at the same time I was being rained on by a little cloud off in the distance. Weirdness!
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