f Weather Abbreviation

f has various meanings in the Weather category. Discover the full forms, definitions, and usage contexts of f in Weather.

Forward

Most Common

Towards or at the fore end of a vessel. (Abbr. Fwd or Forwd.)

Weather
Field

A term used for the jobsite or building site where construction of the project will take place. An area into which a particular category of data or control information is entered. In a database, a portion within a segment that is the smallest unit of the data that can be referred to. The smallest piece of information that is defined in the application file.

Weather
Frequency

The RF frequency of the transmitted radar beam or pulses. The transmitter frequency affects the directionality of the antenna, the curvature of the radar signal, and the level of atmospheric absorption.

Weather
Fahrenheit

The Fahrenheit scale is a temperature scale based on one proposed in 1724 by German physicist Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit (1686–1736).

Weather
Front

A boundary between two different air masses. The difference between two air masses sometimes is unnoticeable. But when the colliding air masses have very different temperatures and amounts of water in them, turbulent weather can erupt. The boundary between two air masses.

Weather
Frozen

While "frozen" describes the state of Minnesota from November to March, it also refers to an unresponsive computer. When a computer does not respond to any user input, it is said to be frozen. When a computer system freezes, or "locks up," the screen stays the same and does not change no matter what buttons you press on your mouse or keyboard.

Weather
Freeze

To solidify molten steel as it cools from the liquid to solid state. An operation in which a storage system blocks I/O from the host system to the affected volumes on the primary site. A freeze operation stops mirroring between the primary and secondary volumes to ensure data consistency at the secondary site. also thaw.

Weather
Filling

An increase in the central pressure of a pressure system; opposite of a deepening. More commonly applied to a low rather than a high. Given to a composition sheathing placed between frames of a wooden vessel to close seams and exclude vermin

Weather
Degrees Fahrenheit

A measurement of temperature.

Weather

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