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Bora is not a katabatic wind (in a sense that katabatic wind implies fall wind), it is downslope wind, it is not thermodynamicaly driven but kinematicaly (i.e. it is driven by the compression of the isentropes by the gravity-wave breaking in the middle troposphere), and it exhibits hydraulic like behavior. I am planing to heavily review this article.
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Luksa17:48, 30 October 2005 (UTC)reply
Catabatic winds are downslope winds. But the above doubletalk was not intended to be taken seriously. My question is, whether the catabatic winds that also occur in Novorossiysk are called bora. If not, the note at the foot of the article should be moved to
Catabatic wind, and expanded. --
Wetman05:19, 24 July 2006 (UTC)--
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Yes, and referring to the language as Serbo-Croatian is perfectly NPOV. Except that when it is called Serbo-Croatian, nationalists on all sides are unhappy. This has been discussed ad nauseam at
Talk:Serbo-Croatian. I suggest that further nationalist grievances be directed there, for this article is about a meteorological phenomenon.
Surtsicna (
talk)
18:20, 18 November 2019 (UTC)reply
First of all, Serbo-croatian language ceased to exist in 1991, now we are talking in terms of Croatian and Serbian languages. If you are keen to promote Yugoslavia or anything that goes with that failed system go to SH Wiki, don't bother us with your problems!
Second, Bura only exist in Croatia and Montenegro as a wind that blow over the Adriatic Coast. Bura doesn't exist in Serbia, and they use Croatian word for it.