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Example sentences for "temperate climates"

  • It is successfully cultivated in the cool-temperate climates of Europe and America.

  • Under cultivation it is a beautiful tree, adapted to cold-temperate climates.

  • A species of the mountains of northeastern Asia with valuable wood and large edible nuts; hardy and often cultivated in cool-temperate climates.

  • The tree is not hardy in cool-temperate climates, but has been successfully grown in northern Italy.

  • This is a shorter period than would be at first supposed, when we consider the advanced age and great dimensions to which, under favorable circumstances, many forest-trees attain in temperate climates.

  • In temperate climates, snakes are consumed by scarcely any beast or bird of prey except the stork, and they have few dangerous enemies but man, though in the tropics other animals prey upon them.

  • They are all three natives of the new world, and of the same climate; they are never found in the cold regions of America, nor can hardly live in temperate climates.

  • The lynx is certainly more common in cold than in temperate climates, and is at least very rare in hot ones.

  • They breed very fast in their native climates; but though they can live, and even produce perfume in temperate climates, yet they cannot multiply.

  • But when the frost has congealed the stagnant waters, they take themselves off into more temperate climates, invariably following the course of the rivers and running streams.

  • The Pelican is more common in tropical regions than in temperate climates.

  • In temperate climates, where the winters are severe, they bury themselves under the earth, or in the mud at the bottom of pools and ponds, and there pass the season without air or food, till returning spring calls them forth.

  • This severe type of malaria occurs sometimes in late summer and autumn, in temperate climates, but is seen much more commonly in the Southern United States and in the tropics.

  • I relate this fact as affording evidence that men born under the torrid zone, after having dwelt in temperate climates, sometimes feel the pernicious effects of the heat of the tropics.

  • From these causes, the land in the most populous regions of equinoctial America still retains a wild aspect, which is destroyed in temperate climates by the cultivation of corn.

  • The earliest age at which persons are capable of begetting or bearing children, usually considered, in temperate climates, to be about fourteen years in males and twelve in females.

  • The forms of the species, belonging to temperate climates, are rather American than European.

  • Already tropical plants are associated with the vegetables of temperate climates; but they are not yet the same as existing species.

  • Nor is it necessary, in order to explain the permanent existence of this icy mantle in temperate climates, to infer the prevalence of any very extraordinary degree of cold.

  • Phthisis seems to be a malady peculiar to temperate climates.

  • It is remarkable for the smoothness and softness of its texture, and is hence highly esteemed in temperate climates as an elegant and agreeable article of clothing to be worn next the skin.

  • The cause of tetanus, in temperate climates, is generally irritation of the nerves, arising from local injuries, especially punctured or lacerated wounds.

  • In temperate climates, and in cold ones during their short summer, ice-houses and ice-safes afford a temperature sufficiently low for keeping meat fresh and sweet for an indefinite period.

  • He bases his opinion on the identity of their symptoms, pathological anatomy, mortality, and contagious character; for he affirms that acute yellow atrophy may exhibit contagious power in temperate climates.

  • The polecat, however, is a wild animal and a native of temperate climates, whereas the ferret is a native of warm countries, and cannot exist even in France, but in a domestic state.

  • The whole species, with all its varieties, appear to be natives of temperate climates, and have been diffused in much greater abundance over warm countries than cold ones.

  • The productions of temperate climates, on the contrary are always mild.

  • Through its cultivated varieties Prunus avium is everywhere known in temperate climates as the Sweet Cherry.

  • It furnishes, in temperate climates, the stone-fruits, plants of ancient and modern agriculture of which there are a score or more commonly cultivated and at least as many more sparingly grown for their edible fruits.

  • The Tertiary fossils both of Europe and North America indicate throughout warm or temperate climates, except those of the more recent Pliocene deposits which merge into the earlier glacial beds.

  • The gazelles and chevrotains inhabit only the hottest countries of the Old World; they cannot exist in temperate climates, and still less in those that are cold.

  • AEgagropili are often found in the animals of temperate climates, but never any bezoars.

  • Most of the ordinary forest-trees of temperate climates belong to this group.

  • Bauhinia is a leguminous genus allied to Cercis, and now inhabits tropical and warm temperate climates in both hemispheres.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "temperate climates" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    but are; compiled from; green peppers; husky whisper; kiss them; many peoples; offering made; often written; poor heart; prove their; stannous chloride; take delight; temperate climate; temperate climates; temperate regions; the heat; the same; then paused; various depths; wearing apparel; when fresh; without her; would hear; yellow spots