[
US
/ˈkɫɛmənt/
]
[ UK /klˈɛmənt/ ]
[ UK /klˈɛmənt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
(of weather or climate) physically mild
clement weather -
(used of persons or behavior) inclined to show mercy
a more clement judge reduced the sentence
How To Use clement In A Sentence
- Alan Clements also gave the idea a positive reception.
- Another tomb of interest (and of which we will speak in extenso in the next instalment of this series) is the tomb of the Pope Clement II, the only pope to be buried north of the Alps. The statue, sculpted by the same (unknown) sculptor as the Horseman, was originally the slab of the tomb, which remains on the west choir, behind the cathedra: Catholic Bamberg: The Cathedral
- A notice was posted on the box office doors to announce the postponement ‘due to inclement weather’.
- Ski mountaineering or touring is a popular Alpine pursuit in spring, when the weather is clement and the crevasses are mapped.
- All you get are inferior Spanish clementines and Florida tangerines, hard as bricks but not so tasty.
- Sightseers had come from all over the country, apparently, despite the inclement weather, to see the site of the atrocities. SACRAMENT
- And in clubbing Clement Sunday in 1 hour, 46 minutes with a nearly flawless baseline game, Agassi showed he is as strong as ever. USATODAY.com - Agassi, Capriati return to tennis' elite
- Livy (XXXII 22 1) has a _murmur_ of mingled praise and dissent following a speech: '_murmur_ ortum aliorum cum adsensu, aliorum inclementer adsentientes increpantium'. The Last Poems of Ovid
- Restricted foraging time due to inclement weather and the resultant decrease in food intake is believed to influence hypothermia in manakins and may induce torpor in hummingbirds.
- Clements had got up and walked to the sliding glass doors that led out on to the terrazzo patio. MURDER SONG