unseasonable

View Synonyms
[ UK /ʌnsˈiːzənəbə‍l/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. badly timed
    an ill-timed intervention
    an untimely remark
    you think my intrusion unseasonable
    it was the wrong moment for a joke
  2. not in keeping with (and usually undesirable for) the season
    a sudden unseasonable blizzard
    unseasonable bright blue weather in November
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How To Use unseasonable In A Sentence

  • Analysts will also hope that M&S confirms that it delayed offering discounts on its clothing ranges - despite weak sales caused by unseasonable mild weather.
  • From the shrinking snowpack of Western Washington through the unseasonable fog and heat of California to the drought of Baja, something was up with the climate, and people were rattled.
  • After two weeks of unseasonable cool weather, forecasters predict a 104-degree scorcher Sunday. Men's Australian Open Final Match Set
  • It was one of those days in June, in which our summer-hopes take umbrage at what we call unseasonable weather, though no season was ever known to pass without them. The Ladies' Vase Polite Manual for Young Ladies
  • Unfortunately for the Japanese, unseasonable rain and fog managed to keep the fire from spreading beyond a small area, and it burned itself out.
  • The world is a big place, so despite unseasonable blizzards in the media/political center of the US Northeast on average the planet is still getting warmer: Matthew Yglesias » January Was the Warmest Temperature in World History
  • The sleepy porter admitted Cleanor without asking a question, though not without a grumble at the unseasonableness of so early a visit.
  • Rene Heroux, a meteorologist with Environment Canada, called the unseasonable weather a heat wave. Canada.com Top Stories
  • Dean McCarron, principal of Mercury Research, is anticipating an "unseasonable" PC growth from 0 to 5 percent for Q4. EE Times-Asia
  • These two great advantages may be made by those who frequently study poets; — the learning moderation, to keep them from unseasonable and foolish reproaching others with their misfortunes, when they themselves enjoy a constant current of prosperity; and magnanimity, that under variety of accidents they be not dejected nor disturbed, but meekly bear the being scoffed at, reproached, and drolled upon. Essays and Miscellanies
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