Libeccio
Appearance
| The winds of the Mediterranean |
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The libeccio (/lɪˈbɛtʃioʊ/; Croatian: lebić [lěbitɕ]; Catalan: llebeig [ʎəˈβɛtʃ]; Maltese: Lbiċ; Greek: λίβας [ˈlivas]; Occitan: labech [laˈβetʃ])[a] is the south-westerly wind of the Western Mediterranean (which predominates in northern Corsica all year round); it frequently raises high seas and may give violent westerly squalls. In summer it is most persistent, but in winter it alternates with the Tramontane (north-east or north). The word libeccio is Italian, coming from Greek through Latin, and originally referred to the direction of Libya.
The libeccio blows from the south-west across the western and central Mediterranean basin. [1]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Also known in some local variants as garbin (Catalan: garbí [ɡəɾˈβi]; Greek: γαρμπής [ɡarˈbis]; Italian: garbino [ɡarˈbiːno]; Serbo-Croatian: garbin [ɡǎrbiːn]; Spanish: garbino, garbín [ɡaɾˈβin(o)]; Occitan: garbin [garˈβi]).
References
[edit]- ^ "Libeccio". Encyclopaedia Britannica.
External links
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lenticular clouds.
Look up libeccio in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
