Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - What is a meteorological proverb?

What is a meteorological proverb?

Meteorological proverb

Weather proverbs refer to folk words that predict weather changes. For thousands of years, human beings have been trying to make accurate weather forecasts. The history of dictation and notes is full of rhymes, anecdotes and proverbs to show whether it will be sunny or stormy tomorrow. Whether it is farmers, vendors or others who want to farm, whether they can predict the weather tomorrow is the key to success or failure. Before mercury barometer was invented, it was extremely difficult to collect any weather forecast data. Although it can provide a tool to predict humidity changes like weather bars, the most reliable way to predict the weather is human experience.

"It is cloudy in the first month, sunny in February, thundering in March and April, rainy in May, sunny in June, windy in July and August, frosty and snowy in September, and cold wave festival in November and December." "A fog will clear up three times, and a fog will bring a strong wind for three days." "Dark clouds are flying all over the sky, and the rain and snow keep falling." "Magpies are singing in the branches, and it is sunny when you go out." "There is no dew on windy nights and no frost on cloudy nights." These humorous rhymes were written by different authors in different years, which predicted the climate change all the year round and the weather changes with the surrounding things. Although it is not necessarily true, it provides a more reliable forecast of weather changes for people to prepare.