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  2. Weather and climate are related but have key differences:
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    Despite their differences, weather and climate are interlinked. As with weather, climate takes into account precipitation, wind speed and direction, humidity, and temperature. In fact, climate can be thought of as an average of weather conditions over time. More importantly, a change in climate can lead to changes in weather patterns.
    www.nationalgeographic.org/article/weather-or-cli…
    Weather is what you experience when you step outside on any given day. In other words, it is the state of the atmosphere at a particular location over the short-term. Climate is the average of the weather patterns in a location over a longer period of time, usually 30 years or more.
    www.noaa.gov/explainers/what-s-difference-betwe…

    “Weather” refers to local conditions on the scale of minutes, hours, days, and even months to years: you can have a particularly wet month, warm winter, or rainy decade. [2,3] “Climate” is an average of weather conditions over 30 years or more, and can be assessed for a single location, large area, or globally. [2,3] While weather can change dramatically in a single location from day to day (for example, cold and rainy one day,...

    www.americangeosciences.org/critical-issues/faq/…
    Weather is the combination of temperature, humidity, precipitation, cloudiness, visibility, and wind. In popular usage, climate represents the synthesis of weather; more formally, it is the weather of a locality averaged over some period (usually 30 years), plus statistics of weather extremes.
    www.diffen.com/difference/Climate_vs_Weather
     
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  4. What’s the difference between climate and weather?