Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - How to describe the weather in English?

How to describe the weather in English?

What is the weather like outside? The easiest way to ask someone what the weather is like outside is, "What's the weather like outside?" Or we can use a very simple it to represent the weather, such as "What's the weather like outside?" It doesn't matter. If you don't like to use What as a question, you can simply say, "What's the weather like outside?" But if we want to ask others whether it will be sunny or rainy sometime in the future, for example, I want to ask them whether it will rain on Monday. In this case, we can say, "Will it rain on Monday?" Here we use the phrase "be should to", which is America's favorite expression. For example, if there is any activity tomorrow, we often ask others whether it will rain or sunny tomorrow. In this case, the United States will say, "Why don't you go and see if it will be sunny tomorrow?" Why not see if the sun will shine tomorrow? To see if it's sunny is to see if it's going to rain. 2. The weather is really nice today. The weather is very good today. How do Americans describe it? Usually they use beautiful, good or cute. Among them, I often hear, "It's really nice/nice/lovely today." On the contrary, what if the weather is bad and it rains heavily? You can describe it as "disgusting". But sometimes you can use irony. Once it was raining cats and dogs outside, and an American classmate and I happened to have no umbrella. As a result, she actually said, "How cute." It's a nice day. At that time, I seriously asked her if the weather was bad, which can be described as cute. Later I learned that she was just satirizing me, which made me feel a little cheated. It rained cats and dogs last night. It rained heavily last night. Torrential rain is a very popular slang. Almost every foreign student in the United States knows how to describe heavy rain with downpour. Of course, if you don't want to use slang, you can just say, "It's raining hard." Or "We are having a heavy rain." It rained heavily, too. It rained heavily and I was soaked to the skin. A drowned rat can only be described as "I'm soaked" in English, so the whole sentence becomes "It's raining cats and dogs outside, so I'm soaked." We have a downpour. In Chinese, it is usually described as "inverted" and has the same counterpart in English. The word "down" is used in English. Just like pouring water (pouring water alone is pouring water). So it's like pouring water. We can say, "We are depressed." There is also a very popular saying. "It's really raining outside." It also means that it is raining heavily. It's just spring. It's just raining in Mao Mao. In English, whether it rains in Mao Mao or it snows in Mao Mao, we can use two verbs, rain in Mao Mao and scatter. Mao Mao rain means "rain in Mao Mao" in meteorology, while terms means "scattering". But it is also often used to describe the rain in Mao Mao. The common usage is "It's raining." Or "It's raining." There is also a word called scattered rain, which means sporadic rain. For example, "we have to cancel the track and field competition because of sporadic rain." We have to cancel the track and field competition because of sporadic light rain. You need to put on your sweater, because it's very cold. You must put on a sweater because it's cold outside. There are several adjectives to describe cold weather. Chilly means the weather is a little "cold", and cold means "cold". Freezing means "freezing". Besides being cold, my roommate taught me a slang term, "colder than a witness's nipple." It can also be described as cold (or unfriendly), but I don't think this is a good word. Because his girlfriend had been trying to stop him from teaching me this slang at that time. As for how cold it is, it depends entirely on the individual. For example, I may think that the freezing point is below 5 degrees Celsius, but do you believe that there are still Americans walking around campus wearing T-shirts at this temperature? I think they think the temperature is just a little cold! But strictly speaking, it can only be said that it is frozen below zero degrees Celsius. Because freezing means that a liquid condenses into a solid, freezing point means "freezing point". The freezing point of water is zero degrees Celsius, so it can be said that it is frozen below zero degrees Celsius! However, when to use freezing usually depends on personal feelings and does not need to be strictly defined. Not zero. Many people often make this mistake. 7. It's hot outside. It's as hot as a stove outside. Before I came to America, I often thought that it was colder in winter in America, so it must be less hot in summer. Later I realized that this was a big mistake. The summer temperature on the east coast of the United States sometimes exceeds 100 degrees Fahrenheit. (equivalent to 37.8 degrees Celsius), at this high temperature, the human body can't naturally dissipate heat, just like a stove. In English, to describe the weather like a stove, we can say, "It's so hot outside." In addition, we can also say that it is extremely hot, "extremely hot." It's the same meaning, slang, "as hot as hades." This Hades here also means hell. We can't play tennis today because the wind is too strong. "It's windy" is usually described by the adjective "windy". For example, it's windy is simple and clear. If it is windy, we can also describe it as "breezy". In addition, I learned the word "gust" when I took the GRE test before, but I hardly heard the word "old beauty" at ordinary times. At most, I hear it once or twice occasionally when listening to the weather forecast. So it is more realistic to use wind and cool breeze. And if there is no wind and the weather is "sultry", which adjective should I use? I heard that America used the word sultry. I know there is another GRE word sultry, which also means "coquettish" (which can also be interpreted as "coquettish"). But I don't think I heard it from American oral English. We had 3 inches of snow and sleep last week. Three inches of snow and hail fell last week. In hydrology, precipitation can be divided into several types: rain, snow, sleet and freezing rain. I think everyone knows about rain and snow. Needless to say, what about sleet? It refers to "hail", ice particles without crystallization, unlike snowflakes with incredible hexagonal crystals. And freezing rain means "freezing rain". The reason for the formation is that the temperature of rainwater has been below zero for a long time, but due to the lack of crystallization conditions, it does not condense into ice crystals, but freezes as soon as it falls to the ground. This is freezing rain. This kind of precipitation is common in winter in America. Besides, Americans often say, "It's very cold." Refers to the ground freezing, but there is not necessarily precipitation in this case. Sometimes it didn't rain at all last night, and the earth was white in the morning. The main reason is that the dew on the ground and branches freezes. But beauty is beauty. Remind everyone not to drive on the road casually when the road is icy, which is very dangerous. Because there is a piece of black ice on the road that can't be separated from the naked eye, you will slip as long as you drive past, which is easy to cause problems. 10. The devil is beating his wife. (It's raining) When you accidentally see the sun outside and it's raining at the same time, it's a good sign for China people, but for the United States, they think it's a vision and not a good thing. So when I was young, I asked my parents curiously why it rained and the sun shone at the same time.