A vacation means following the President to some sunny clime and working there, nonstop.
From the time.com
Maybe it was the sunny clime, but Chinese negotiators went to Mexico ready to compromise.
From the time.com
California's pleasant clime plays a role, but efficiency still matters.
From the time.com
These are not the swinging superrich, who have always been free to flit from clime to clime.
From the time.com
Why fire hundreds of people only to relocate to a sunnier clime.
From the latimes.com
Yet now, perhaps due to our increasingly conservative sociopolitical clime, something has shifted.
From the timesunion.com
In other words, this is another set of songs largely about finding solace in a tropical clime.
From the kentucky.com
Clime, who lives seven miles away in Centreville, got an easier commute along with the new assignment.
From the washingtonpost.com
Suddenly, the idea of holidaying in a temperate clime in one's own backyard becomes greatly tempting.
From the economist.com
More examples
Climate: the weather in some location averaged over some long period of time; "the dank climate of southern Wales"; "plants from a cold clime travel best in winter"
The climes (singular clime; also clima, plural climata, from Greek u03BAu03BBu03AFu03BCu03B1 klima, plural u03BAu03BBu03AFu03BCu03B1u03C4u03B1 klimata, meaning "inclination" or "slope") in classical Greco-Roman geography and astronomy were the divisions of the inhabited portion of the spherical Earth by geographic latitude.
A particular region as defined by its weather or climate; Climate