Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Without
weather .
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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The larger ones, chondrules fused together by the impact, thus became ore deposits such as are rare on weatherless basaltic Luna.
The Stars Are Also Fire Anderson, Poul, 1926-2001 1994
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The larger ones, chondrules fused together by the impact, thus became ore deposits such as are rare on weatherless basaltic Luna.
The Stars Are Also Fire Anderson, Poul, 1926-2001 1994
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Graffiti of ice the sunless day, glazing the darkening blood brick and terra cotta as if the house is to be preserved weatherless in some skin of clear museum plastic, an architectural document, an old-fashioned apparatus whose use is forgotten.
Gravity's Rainbow Pynchon, Thomas 1978
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As some secrets were given to the Gypsies to preserve against centrifugal History, and some to the Kabbalists, the Templars, the Rosi-crucians, so have this Secret of the Fearful Assembly, and others, found their ways inside the weatherless spaces of this or that Ethnic Joke.
Gravity's Rainbow Pynchon, Thomas 1978
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In this weatherless world, walls and roofs need but give privacy; they were made of many-colored fabrics, loosely draped so they could move with currents, on poles which gave shapes soaring in fantastic curves.
Ensign Flandry Anderson, Poul, 1926- 1966
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Evanescent and mutable to their ultimate end, their lives passed by blandly in dizzying headaches caused by the sun of the weatherless country during the dry season.
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The weatherless week, when Rebecca Mary had put off her "asking" from day to day, Aunt Olivia went back to the third time.
Rebecca Mary Annie Hamilton Donnell
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Outside the portico, which by the way was a curious example of the survival of custom in architecture, since none was needed in that weatherless place, I turned to the right and followed the wide street to the temple enclosure.
When the World Shook; being an account of the great adventure of Bastin, Bickley and Arbuthnot Henry Rider Haggard 1890
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On the airless, windless, weatherless expanse of the lunar surface, a scratch in the soil made in 1972 will still be fresh years, millennia and epochs later.
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The book notes the two had a little trouble planting the flag and explains how Armstrong's small step for man -- his first boot print -- will remain crisp in dust on the weatherless planet for millions of years.
unknown title 2009
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