Poll #23217 Weather terms: Watch vs Warning
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 7
Without looking it up, do you know the difference between a "warning" and a "watch", in terms of weather events?
If you answered Yes, which is more likely to be dangerous?
If you answered No or Unsure, which do you think is more likely to be dangerous, without looking it up?
View Answers
Watch
2 (33.3%)
Warning
2 (33.3%)
Neither sounds worse than the other
1 (16.7%)
I answered Yes
1 (16.7%)
The TV scrolled a severe thunderstorm message along the bottom of the screen, a warning for some counties, and a watch for others.
But I can never remember the difference between a watch and a warning, which is more severe, without looking it up: https://weatherworksinc.com/news/watch-vs-warning
Without looking it up, my first instinct may be that a warning sounds worse than a watch. But I do remember that one means that a tornado or storm has been sighted, and the other one means that conditions are simply favorable for one. So then I become unsure; it seems to me that "watch" might mean that one has been sighted, and is being watched. Whereas a warning might just be a warning that one could occur. In my profession, a *warning* is one of those things you get when running a program that can usually be ignored (it informs you that something *may* not be as you want), as opposed to an *error* which means that something went really wrong.
So, I wonder if other people have the same problem distinguishing between the terms too or not.