A severe weather threat is in place from the Mississippi and Ohio valleys into the Southeast starting this weekend, with ...
March is flipping the script on the old "in like a lion, out like a lamb" adage this year as our weather is about to start ...
TOLEDO, Ohio — You've likely heard the old adage "March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb." But is there any scientific validity to this folklore? Meteorologist John Burchfield ...
Weather has its own medley of idioms. March, for example, is known to “come in like a lion, go out like a lamb.” But why is it that we compare the month of March to two animals? And ...
Some think it has links to astronomy with the locations of the constellations Leo (lion) and Aries (ram or lamb). At the start of the month, Leo is on the eastern horizon at sunset and at the end ...
In like a lion, out like a lamb.” Since we’ve finally almost reached that fabled calendrical turning point in the middle of the month, I thought I’d put together a playlist that goes in like a lion ...
With Trump's Zigzag Actions on Trade, March Came in Like a Lion and Won't Be Going Out Like a Lamb WASHINGTON (AP) — A gobsmacked planet is wondering what's next from President Donald Trump on ...
The beginning of March will be “actually more lamb-like than lion-like” as areas of high pressure bring mild weather, Ms Creswick said in Friday’s video forecast Weather Studio Live.
There’s an old saying about March "coming in like a lion, out like a lamb" that’s used to describe a trend that the month is supposed to begin stormy but end with calm weather. For much of the ...
They say March comes ‘in like a lion, out like a lamb,’ but where did this phrase come from? The WGN Morning News team also discusses spring cleaning, feet exercise, and blooming chocolate.