How to say haze in English
As the air pollution problem in big cities becomes more and more serious, smog weather occurs more and more frequently, causing great harm to the human body. In order to reduce the occurrence of haze weather, we should all protect the environment and reduce the discharge of pollutants. So do you know how to say smog in English? Now I will bring you how to say smog in English. You are welcome to learn together.
The English term for haze 1:
smog
English [sm?ɡ] American [smɑɡ, sm?ɡ]
English expressions for haze 2:
fog and haze
English expressions related to haze:
smog insurance
Fog Fog and haze weather
Atmospheric haze
Examples of English sayings about haze:
1. Now, as coastal areas are affected by harmful haze Due to the threat, Japan began to further provide technical assistance to China, which was becoming increasingly polluted.
Now, with hazardous smog threatening its coast, Japan is offering further tech know-how to an increasingly desperately polluted China.
2. Slowly, Wang Yue in this winter A fairy tale world is created in the city that is always shrouded in smog.
Gradually, she created a fairytale world in the city, which is always covered by fog and haze in the winters.
3. Diesel engines have large displacement and poor pollutant emissions. It has caused environmental pollution problems such as haze and photochemical smog.
Large displacement diesel engine pollutant emissions are relatively poor, resulting in a series of environmental problems, especially like great fog and haze.
4. Haze pollution is a new type of atmospheric pollution Pollution phenomenon is a type of pollution caused by various physical and chemical reasons.
The pollution of fog and haze, which is caused by many physical and chemical reasons, is a new kind of air pollution in China.
5. The opening ceremony took place on a sultry morning In progress, flags in the village's neighborhoods were shrouded in urban smog caused by pollution.
The ceremony took place on a muggy morning, with the village's blocks offlats shrouded in a pollution haze.
6. Deduced the attenuation of fog, haze, clouds, and atmosphere with height. The law of cloud layer laser echo characteristics is given.
We get rules of the attenuation of fog, cloud, haze and atmosphere as theheight changes, and give the calculation formula of the laser scatteringcharacter of cloud layer.
Haze-related English reading :
Many English-language newspaper websites in China have published a large number of reports on the smog-locked city. Let’s take a look at the news headlines on them first.
Media such as "China Daily" and "Shanghai Daily" published articles such as: Air clears but haze threat remains?, City fog alert removed, haze may ease?, How to avoid the danger from heavy haze?, Colder air arrives With gusts and pollution haze?,?Cold front to disperse haze in cities?,?China environmentalists slam inaction over smog?,?Cities hit hard by smog?,?All must strive hard to combat smog? and other titles. From these reports, we found that both haze and smog are used more frequently, but the frequency of the former is obviously higher. So which word is the exact counterpart of haze?
According to the "English-Chinese Dictionary", haze, which means weather, has two translations, namely haze and smog, and although smog is also translated as Smoke, but it usually refers to a mixture of smoke and fog emitted from industrial areas. From this point of view, the correspondence between haze and haze is more reasonable. This can also be seen from the English meanings of these two words. The definitions provided by the "New Oxford English Dictionary" for haze and smog are respectively "a slight obscuration of the lower atmosphere, typically caused by fine suspended particles" and "fog or haze intensified by smoke or other atmospheric pollutants". It can be seen that haze is caused by fine suspended particles, while smog refers to fog or haze affected by smoke or other atmospheric pollutants. So we can sometimes think of smog as a type of haze.
As far as the usage of haze is concerned, it is usually used with adjectives such as thick and dense to indicate more serious haze. "Times" reported on the severe smog sweeping East China on December 5 with the headline "China's Eastern Coast Blanketed in Toxic Haze" (toxic haze shrouding China's eastern coast). As for smog, it can also be modified by some adjectives, such as dense, choking (suffocating), noxious (toxic), etc.
The "Oxford English Dictionary" traces the earliest appearance of haze back to 1706, when it meant "dense fog". This is more than a hundred years later than the adjective hazy, which appeared in 1582, so haze is a typical retroformation. Dr. Johnson also included the word haze in his "English Dictionary" in 1755, and he explained it as "fog; mist". It must have been in the middle to late 19th century, as industrial pollution intensified, that haze took on its current meaning. In fact, haze later acquired other multi-layered meanings, such as "fog", "confused" and "bullying" used as a verb.
Smog is a compound word composed of smoke and fog. Since it is a product of industrial pollution, it appeared much later. The time period given in the "Collins English Dictionary" is C20, which is the broader 20th century; the year of first appearance in the "Oxford English Dictionary" is 1905. The recognized creator of the term is a doctor named DeVoe. He used the word smog in a conference paper titled "Fog and Smoke", and was later quoted in a London newspaper. As a result, smog became the best word to describe the London fog at that time. . Strangely, the American Merriam-Webster Dictionary actually puts the first appearance of smog in 1884. In 1957, a compound word composed of smog appeared in English, namely photochemical smog (usually translated as "photochemical smog" or "photochemical pollution"). Among the new English words, there is also a compound word composed of smog? data smog. This term, which first appeared in 1993, has been translated as "information smoke" or literally translated as "data smoke". It usually refers to the overwhelming amount of information obtained through network retrieval.