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landfall

/land-fawl/US // ˈlændˌfɔl //UK // (ˈlændˌfɔːl) //

降落,着陆,着陆点,落地

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : an approach to or sighting of land: The ship will make its landfall at noon tomorrow.
    • : the land sighted or reached.
    • : a landslide.

Examples

  • That would make it the strongest hurricane on record to make landfall in Somalia.

  • The primary metric they were interested in was the rate the hurricane lost strength over the first 24 hours after landfall.

  • In 1967, a typical storm’s intensity decayed by 76 percent within the first day after landfall.

  • Only five — Laura, Teddy, Delta, Epsilon and Eta — have become major hurricanes with winds topping 178 kilometers per hour, although only Laura and Eta made landfall near the peak of their strength as Category 4 storms.

  • Unusually, this is the first hurricane to make landfall in Florida this season.

  • As late as September 1, three days after Katrina made landfall, there were no coordinated efforts in the area.

  • And on making landfall in Bermuda he decided that this was the place to settle for a while and get writing songs.

  • As Sandy approached landfall six months ago, news media struggled to decide what to call the meteorological phenomenon.

  • Would downgrading it hours before landfall cause people to disregard warnings?

  • But when the storm makes landfall, you get the small waves along with the big, all mashed together in a disorganized jumble.

  • We were now approaching the longitude of D'Urville's landfall, and still the pack showed no signs of slackening.

  • The hunters had made what Mildmay characteristically designated “a bad landfall.”

  • Your real land-birds never know their own roosts, even in a landfall at sea.

  • The distance from the landfall to this point was nearly 300 leagues.

  • There is an island there named Thanet, which was the spot chosen for the landfall of our visitors.