Occluded Front(Forms when awarm air mass iscaught between twocolder air masses,one of whichovertakes the other)Doppler Radar(Radio/Microwave)Westerlies(Winds that flowfrom west toeast and towardthe poles)Doldrums(Located atequator andlittle to nowind)Meteorology(Study oftheweather)NOAA(NationalOceanic andAtmosphericAssociation)WeatherMaps(National,Continental,and Global)PolarEasterlies(Extend fromthe poles to60° latitude)Air Mass (Largebodies of aircovering landand oceans thatmove)Cold Front (Coldair mass pushesunder a warm airmass, forcing thewarm air to risesharply)Anemometer(Instrumentused tomeasure windspeed (mph)Fujita Scale (Ratestornado intensity,based primarily onthe damagetornadoes inflict onhuman-builtstructures andvegetation)Clouds (Formswhen air rises,cools to thedew point, andbecomessaturated)NWS(NationalWeatherServicePrecipitation)Coriolis Effect(Rotation orspinning of Earthon its axis plays arole in windpatterns)WeatherSatellites(OrbitEarth)Trade Winds(Winds thatblow toward theequator from30°North andSouth latitude)Tornado (Whirlingfunnel of air thatforms between thebottom of a stormcloud and theground)WeatherStation Reports(Use symbolsto representfactors)WMO (WorldMeteorologicalOrganization)Atmosphere(Layer or"blanket" of airthat surroundsthe Earth)Warm Front(Warm, moistair mass slidesup and over acold air mass)Temperature(MeasuredusingFahrenheit orCelsius)Barometer(Scientificinstrument used inmeteorology tomeasureatmosphericpressure.)Occluded Front(Forms when awarm air mass iscaught between twocolder air masses,one of whichovertakes the other)Doppler Radar(Radio/Microwave)Westerlies(Winds that flowfrom west toeast and towardthe poles)Doldrums(Located atequator andlittle to nowind)Meteorology(Study oftheweather)NOAA(NationalOceanic andAtmosphericAssociation)WeatherMaps(National,Continental,and Global)PolarEasterlies(Extend fromthe poles to60° latitude)Air Mass (Largebodies of aircovering landand oceans thatmove)Cold Front (Coldair mass pushesunder a warm airmass, forcing thewarm air to risesharply)Anemometer(Instrumentused tomeasure windspeed (mph)Fujita Scale (Ratestornado intensity,based primarily onthe damagetornadoes inflict onhuman-builtstructures andvegetation)Clouds (Formswhen air rises,cools to thedew point, andbecomessaturated)NWS(NationalWeatherServicePrecipitation)Coriolis Effect(Rotation orspinning of Earthon its axis plays arole in windpatterns)WeatherSatellites(OrbitEarth)Trade Winds(Winds thatblow toward theequator from30°North andSouth latitude)Tornado (Whirlingfunnel of air thatforms between thebottom of a stormcloud and theground)WeatherStation Reports(Use symbolsto representfactors)WMO (WorldMeteorologicalOrganization)Atmosphere(Layer or"blanket" of airthat surroundsthe Earth)Warm Front(Warm, moistair mass slidesup and over acold air mass)Temperature(MeasuredusingFahrenheit orCelsius)Barometer(Scientificinstrument used inmeteorology tomeasureatmosphericpressure.)

Untitled Bingo - Call List

(Print) Use this randomly generated list as your call list when playing the game. There is no need to say the BINGO column name. Place some kind of mark (like an X, a checkmark, a dot, tally mark, etc) on each cell as you announce it, to keep track. You can also cut out each item, place them in a bag and pull words from the bag.


1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
  1. Occluded Front (Forms when a warm air mass is caught between two colder air masses, one of which overtakes the other)
  2. Doppler Radar (Radio/Microwave)
  3. Westerlies (Winds that flow from west to east and toward the poles)
  4. Doldrums (Located at equator and little to no wind)
  5. Meteorology (Study of the weather)
  6. NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association)
  7. Weather Maps (National, Continental, and Global)
  8. Polar Easterlies (Extend from the poles to 60° latitude)
  9. Air Mass (Large bodies of air covering land and oceans that move)
  10. Cold Front (Cold air mass pushes under a warm air mass, forcing the warm air to rise sharply)
  11. Anemometer (Instrument used to measure wind speed (mph)
  12. Fujita Scale (Rates tornado intensity, based primarily on the damage tornadoes inflict on human-built structures and vegetation)
  13. Clouds (Forms when air rises, cools to the dew point, and becomes saturated)
  14. NWS (National Weather Service Precipitation)
  15. Coriolis Effect (Rotation or spinning of Earth on its axis plays a role in wind patterns)
  16. Weather Satellites (Orbit Earth)
  17. Trade Winds (Winds that blow toward the equator from 30°North and South latitude)
  18. Tornado (Whirling funnel of air that forms between the bottom of a storm cloud and the ground)
  19. Weather Station Reports (Use symbols to represent factors)
  20. WMO (World Meteorological Organization)
  21. Atmosphere (Layer or "blanket" of air that surrounds the Earth)
  22. Warm Front (Warm, moist air mass slides up and over a cold air mass)
  23. Temperature (Measured using Fahrenheit or Celsius)
  24. Barometer (Scientific instrument used in meteorology to measure atmospheric pressure.)