Hō͘-sap-á
Guā-māu
Tāi-chū-jiân hē-lia̍t ê chi̍t pō͘-hūn |
Thiⁿ-khì |
---|
Kùi-chiat |
Chhun · Hā · Chhiu · Tang |
Jia̍t-tài kùi-chiat |
Hān-kùi · Hō͘-kùi |
Hong-pō |
Tōa-seh · Hûn · Hā-kek pō-liû · Hong-poe-soa · Extratropical cyclone · Firestorm · Ice storm · Lightning · Supercell · Thunderstorm · Tornado · Tropical cyclone (Hurricane) · Waterspout · Winter storm |
Kàng-chúi |
Hō͘-sap-á · Sòaⁿ · Peng-pha̍uh · Hō͘ · Seh |
Khì-siōng-ha̍k |
Khong-khì u-jiám · Khì-hāu · Hûn · Hân-liû · Tà-bū · Jia̍t-lōng · Khì-siōng-ha̍k · Giâm-chùn thiⁿ-khì · Thiⁿ-khì ū-pò |
Hō͘-sap-á (雨霎-), ia̍h-sī hō͘-mn̂g-á (雨毛-), sī chi̍t chióng sió-hêng ê lo̍h-hō͘ hiān-siōng. Hō͘-sap-á ê hō͘-tih ti̍t-kèng bô chhiau-kòe 0.5 mm.[1]
Chham-khó
[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]- ↑ National Weather Service Observing Handbook No. 8, Aviation Weather Observations for Supplementary Aviation Weather Reporting Stations (SAWRS), Manual Observations, October 1996