Inclement in a sentence as an adjective

If the weather is inclement, talk about the weather.

What if your backup systems get destroyed by inclement weather?

They only come out in the winter, and are likely responsible for as many if not more accidents than inclement weather.

Some people aren't willing to pay more, so it curbs demand, while incentivizing drivers who may not wish to drive in inclement weather to stay out.

I read this years ago and it really stuck with me. Now when I venture out into inclement weather I always load up the car with blankets, water, food, ratchet straps, and other emergency supplies.

Can't speak for the previous poster, but my company has a strict policy - people with children get first consideration for time off. When there is inclement weather, they're the first sent home to take care of their children.

Is this supposed to be a privilege, getting out of the car in potentially inclement weather and messing around with flammable liquids?

> Is this supposed to be a privilege, getting out of the car in potentially inclement weather and messing around with flammable liquids?Way to be hyperbolic.

Eh, as an American who's visited several major US cities, I've observed a whole lot of variation in behavior during inclement weather, partly because the US is pretty big and hence pretty diverse in climate.

I'm from Norway, and we have areas where you'll not be able to see over the snow when driving at certain times of winter, and keeping the buses running is usually not a big problem, as long as the roads gets cleared regularly.> unlike rail which has fewer problems in inclement weather... also depends on how prepared they are.

Inclement definitions

adjective

(of weather or climate) severe

adjective

used of persons or behavior; showing no clemency or mercy; "the harsh sentence of an inclement judge"