That's OK.
Here's another: Distinguish for the layman, e.g., me, the difference between a meteorologist and a climatologist.
Thanks.
P.S. As soon as I saw your answer, I grasped my mistake. Still it would be nice to have your answer to as to that distinction.
Meteorology deals with day to day weather and weather is very chaotic. That is why forecasts beyond 7 to 10 days seldom pan out. Conversely, climate is based on long term trends. The World Meteorological Organization defines climate as the average trend of weather over a period of 30 years or longer. What the long term trend essentially does is remove the noise from the overall climate system. Things like ENSO (El Nino & La Nina) and PDO (Pacific Decadal Oscillation) are oscillations and affect climate on the short term only. They do not add or take anything from Earth's overall energy budget.
Source: NASA/GISS
Looking at year to year or even decade to decade is very noisy, no real trends stick out. But look at "the whole picture" and the trend is obvious.
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