very good visibility - meaning and definition. What is very good visibility
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What (who) is very good visibility - definition

BOOK BY P.G. WODEHOUSE
Very Good Jeeves

visibility         
  • [[Fog]]gy morning road
  • Airplane flying into clouds on descent for landing
  • On clear days, Tel Aviv's skyline is visible from the Carmel mountains, 80 km north
IN METEOROLOGY, DISTANCE AT WHICH AN OBJECT OR LIGHT CAN BE CLEARLY DISCERNED
Zero visibility
n.
1.
Perceptibility, exposure to view.
2.
Conspicuousness.
Visibility         
  • [[Fog]]gy morning road
  • Airplane flying into clouds on descent for landing
  • On clear days, Tel Aviv's skyline is visible from the Carmel mountains, 80 km north
IN METEOROLOGY, DISTANCE AT WHICH AN OBJECT OR LIGHT CAN BE CLEARLY DISCERNED
Zero visibility
The visibility is the measure of the distance at which an object or light can be clearly discerned. In meteorology it depends on the transparency of the surrounding air and as such, it is unchanging no matter the ambient light level or time of day.
visibility         
  • [[Fog]]gy morning road
  • Airplane flying into clouds on descent for landing
  • On clear days, Tel Aviv's skyline is visible from the Carmel mountains, 80 km north
IN METEOROLOGY, DISTANCE AT WHICH AN OBJECT OR LIGHT CAN BE CLEARLY DISCERNED
Zero visibility
¦ noun the state of being visible.
?the distance one can see as determined by light and weather conditions.

Wikipedia

Very Good, Jeeves

Very Good, Jeeves is a collection of eleven short stories by P. G. Wodehouse, all featuring Jeeves and Bertie Wooster. It was first published in the United States on 20 June 1930 by Doubleday, Doran, New York, and in the United Kingdom on 4 July 1930 by Herbert Jenkins, London. The stories had all previously appeared in Strand Magazine in the UK and in Liberty or Cosmopolitan magazines in the US between 1926 and 1930.

As well as Jeeves and his master Bertie Wooster, the stories also feature many regular characters, including Tuppy Glossop, Bingo Little, Bobbie Wickham, Aunt Dahlia, Aunt Agatha and Sir Roderick Glossop.

Bertie says the titular phrase four times in the collection.