We found 3 definitions of precipitations from 2 different sources.
NounPlural: precipitations |
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precipitation - the falling to earth of any form of water (rain or snow or hail or sleet or mist) | ||
downfall | ||
atmospheric condition, weather, weather condition, conditions the atmospheric conditions that comprise the state of the atmosphere in terms of temperature and wind and clouds and precipitation; "they were hoping for good weather"; "every day we have weather conditions and yesterday was no exception"; "the conditions were too rainy for playing in the snow" | ||
fine spray precipitation in very small drops | ||
hail enthusiastic greeting | ||
rainfall, rain anything happening rapidly or in quick successive; "a rain of bullets"; "a pelting of insults" | ||
sleet partially melted snow (or a mixture of rain and snow) | ||
snowfall, snow English writer of novels about moral dilemmas in academe (1905-1980) | ||
virga light wispy precipitation that evaporates before it reaches the ground (especially when the lower air is low in humidity) | ||
precipitation - an unexpected acceleration or hastening; "he is responsible for the precipitation of his own demise" | ||
acceleration the act of accelerating; increasing the speed | ||
precipitation - the act of casting down or falling headlong from a height | ||
drop, fall the act of dropping something; "they expected the drop would be successful" | ||
precipitation - the process of forming a chemical precipitate | ||
chemical action, chemical change, chemical process (chemistry) any process determined by the atomic and molecular composition and structure of the substances involved | ||
precipitation - the quantity of water falling to earth at a specific place within a specified period of time; "the storm brought several inches of precipitation" | ||
indefinite quantity an estimated quantity | ||
precipitation - overly eager speed (and possible carelessness); "he soon regretted his haste" | ||
haste, hastiness, hurry, hurriedness | ||
swiftness, fastness, speed the quality of being fixed in place as by some firm attachment |