http://www.webstersdictionary1828.com/Dictionary/climate
CLIMATE, noun
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In geography, a part of the surface of the earth, bounded by two circles parallel to the equator, and of such a breadth that the longest day in the parallel nearest the pole is half an hour longer than that nearest to the equator. The beginning of a climate is a parallel circle in which the longest day is half and hour shorter than that at the end. The climates begin at the equator, where the day is 12 hours long; and at the end of the first climate the longest day is 12 hours long, and this increase of half an hour constitutes a climate to the polar circles; from which climates are measured by the increase of a month.
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In a popular sense, a tract of land, region or country, differing from another in the temperature of the air; or any region or country with respect to the temperature of the air, the seasons, and their peculiar qualities, without any regard to the length of the days, or to geographical position. Thus we say, a warm or cold climate; a moist or dry climate; a happy climate; a genial climate; a mountainous climate
CLIMATE, verb intransitive To dwell; to reside in a particular region.
Best I can surmise, it's another way to describe time zones? I can't visualize the circles though -- I don't know if they intersect or are just tangentially joined.
Thoughts?
Tweets:
https://greatawakening.win/p/13zMwr65Y5/hillary-and-podestas-accounts-tw/c/
To me it sounds like the definition is speaking perpendicular to time zones. Basically start at the equator, go up until the difference between day lengths equals a half hour then draw a latitude line. That zone between the equator and latitude would be your climate. Continue up the latitudes and you’ll cut your climate zones. If you do it that way it would make sense since you are moving away from the equator.
This is simple except it's 19th-century language. Nowadays to use this meaning we might say the entire region between two given latitude parallels. ("Parallels" are actually circles of different sizes that do not touch because they're in parallel planes.) For instance everywhere between equator and the parallel about 10 degrees north is one "climate"; from there to the next circle about 18 degrees north is the next "climate"; and so on. It's an arbitrary way of saying that if the longest day is within a half-hour range the temperature variation can idealistically be regarded as stable. It's been thoroughly superseded.
Nowadays "climate" means a god that some worship because they don't know how to control it, nor how to worship the God who made it. In their pantheon, killing other humans directly and indirectly is an attempt to make their own lives better by appeasing the wrath of "climate". Not related to above. Pray for the mercy of God the Creator upon the victimized.
The second part seems to be more specific like on either side of a mountain. One side will get rain the other will be desert. It doesn’t fit by using #1 since topography would effect it separately than using latitudes and the angle of the earths axis and so on.
seems like #1 is similar to The 45th parallel.
I always thought "Climate change" = political climate.
Thermidor ('warm month') was when the French Revolution turned against the Jacobins like Robespierre. It has come to imply a retreat from radicalism. In this case I think it might be code for the public abandoning radical globalism.
I agree wholeheartedly on Climate Change meaning a change to THEIR "Climate"
For these old definitions, such as this one, I'm trying to make sure all facets are understood.
That this definition has figures could come into play, so I'm checking it out.