[
UK
/sˈiːzənəl/
]
[ US /ˈsizənəɫ/ ]
[ US /ˈsizənəɫ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
occurring at or dependent on a particular season
a seasonal rise in unemployment
seasonal labor
NOUN
- a worker who finds employment only in certain seasons
How To Use seasonal In A Sentence
- Ballymaloe take a more seasonal approach to things by using redcurrant rather than lemon juice, made by simmering a couple of punnets of the astringent little fruits with water, and then pushing them through a sieve. How to make perfect strawberry jam
- There wasn't a puff of wind for most of an unseasonally cold day and the heavy overnight rain had softened both the fairways and greens to make them more receptive.
- HOUSES decked out in bright lights are the worst seasonal faux pas, according to a survey. The Sun
- We still went ahead getting the property ready for the season, training seasonal staff and volunteers.
- Text and music do not necessarily coincide in their classification: a ferial text may have a seasonal melody; equally a seasonal, proper or common text may use a ferial melody (eg a short respond or versicle and response).
- On an unseasonally nippy May Tuesday, two women, a man and a young girl wheeling a baby's buggy, set about cracking open the votes in Kinsealy.
- Four main components indicate repeated use of this location as a seasonally occupied camp for the exploitation of riverine resources.
- Some of the most charismatic cloud forest species such as the resplendent quetzal (Pharomacrus mocinno) and three-wattled bellbird (Procnias tricarunculata) are equally dependent on the seasonal moist forests as they migrate annually to these moist forests at the completion of their breeding season. Costa Rican seasonal moist forests
- Some positive news surfaced yesterday: Mexican scientists said the contagiousness of the swine flu is no greater than that of the seasonal flu that circulates every year.
- Subterranean species are difficult to monitor since they appear seasonally and sporadically in seeps and springs or may not appear even during high water flows.