English
Etymology
From sub- + zero.
Adjective
sub-zero (not comparable)
- (of a temperature) below 0°C; freezing cold
2021 February 24, “Network News: NR takes pride in track teams as effects of Storm Darcy repelled...”, in RAIL, number 925, page 13:Several days of sub-zero temperatures caused icicles up to 1.5 metres long to form in tunnels across Greater Manchester, Lancashire and Cumbria.
- (US, of a temperature) below 0°F (−18°C)
Translations
(of a temperature) below 0°C
- Arabic: تَحْتَ الصِّفْر (taḥta ṣ-ṣifr)
- Belarusian: ніжэ́й нуля́ (nižéj nuljá), мінусавы́ (minusavý)
- Bulgarian: отрица́телен (bg) (otricátelen), под ну́лата (pod núlata)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 零下 (zh) (língxià)
- Czech: pod nulou
- French: au-dessous de zéro
- German: unter Null
- Ido: sub zero
- Italian: sotto zero
- Japanese: 氷点下 (ja) (ひょうてんか, hyōtenka), 零下 (ja) (れいか, reika)
- Korean: 영하(零下) (ko) (yeongha), 령하(零下) (ko) (ryeongha) (North Korea)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: minusgrader m pl
- Polish: poniżej zera
- Russian: ни́же нуля́ (níže nuljá), минусово́й (ru) (minusovój)
- Slovak: pod nulou
- Spanish: bajo cero
- Ukrainian: ни́жче нуля́ (nýžče nuljá), мінусо́вий (minusóvyj)
|
Anagrams