Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - How hot is it? Fill in the blanks and fill in the three-letter words.

How hot is it? Fill in the blanks and fill in the three-letter words.

1. It’s so hot that I’m sweating

2. It’s so hot that I feel nervous.

3. Panting due to heat.

4. Panting from the heat.

5. It’s so hot.

Extended information:

Because quantifiers are words used to express quantitative units of people, things or actions, so "one person, two pears, three bells, and a teapot" The "pieces, pieces, mouths, handles" and the "jin, kilograms, buckets, liters, feet, inches, zhang" used to express weights and measures are all different types of quantitative units used to express people or things.

Quantifiers are divided into two types: object quantifiers and verbal quantifiers. Material quantifiers represent the calculation units of people and things, such as the "piece" in "a person". Verb quantifiers express the number of actions and the total amount of time they occur, such as the "times" in "see three times" and the "day" in "see three days."

Quantifiers that modify nouns can be divided into two situations according to whether the noun is countable:

Countable nouns, such as people and tables; uncountable nouns, such as sugar and water.

Sentences:

1. It’s so hot that I’m sweating: I ran around in the playground and I’m so hot that I’m sweating.

2. The heat makes me feel nervous: Grandma, who was already weak, feels very hot in this weather.

3. Panting from the heat: animals in summer are full of vitality. The puppy was so hot that it panted; the cicada was so hot that it screamed: "Cicada, cicada!"

4. Panting from the heat: The weather outside was too hot, and the mother came back from outside panting from the heat.

5. It was so hot that it squealed: The frog squealed because of the heat in the pond.