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sleet
/ ː /
noun
partly melted falling snow or hail or (esp US) partly frozen rain
the thin coat of ice that forms when sleet or rain freezes on cold surfaces
verb
(intr) to fall as sleet
sleet
Precipitation that falls to earth in the form of frozen or partially frozen raindrops, often when the temperature is near the freezing point. Sleet usually leaves the cloud in the form of snow that melts as it passes through warm layers of air during its descent. The raindrops and partially melted snowflakes then freeze in the colder layers nearer the earth before striking the ground as pellets of ice, which usually bounce. By contrast, hail forms by the accumulation of layers of ice on the hailstone as it moves up and down in the cloud, and hailstones can become much larger than sleet pellets. The word sleet is also used informally to describe a mixture of snow, sleet, and rain.
Other 51Թ Forms
- ˈٲ adjective
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of sleet1
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of sleet1
Example Sentences
This layer is normally too thin for the water droplets to freeze back into sleet or snow but they are supercooled once again.
A spell of colder weather has set in across the UK, with some places likely to see sleet and snow.
The grey skies and sleet of a Belarusian winter add to an overriding sense of inactivity.
The forecast calls for temperatures in the low 30s with sleet and snow a possibility.
Rain and sleet are also expected, leading to a risk of ice.
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