Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - Popular English

Popular English

Hot English: "hot".

1. Daily conversation:

It's hot outside today. It's hot outside today.

The weather is sultry; I can't take it anymore. It's too hot for me.

We are in a heat wave. We are in a heat wave.

2. Weather forecast:

The temperature will reach 40 degrees Celsius. The temperature will reach 40 degrees Celsius, which is very hot.

On a sultry day, I can't see any relief. The weather is sultry and there is no sign of cooling down.

Keep moisture; The heat index is ridiculously high. Keep moisture; The somatosensory temperature is abnormally high.

3. Literature and description:

The sun shone kindly, creating a desert landscape. The sun shines mercilessly, forming a hot desert scenery.

The asphalt road shimmered in the midday rain and heat. At noon, the asphalt road sparkled in the hot sun.

She wiped her forehead, trying to get out of the burning sun. She wiped her forehead, trying to avoid the hot sun.

4. Natural disasters:

Score the temperature to check the drought conditions. The extremely hot temperature aggravated the drought.

The fire raged in the hot sun. Under the scorching sun, wildfires raged.

The heat wave caused water shortage and crop failure. The heat wave caused water shortage and crop failure.

In various contexts, "scorching" and "raining" can be used to describe extremely hot weather. These expressions help us to describe the weather more accurately, and can effectively convey the feeling and influence of hot weather in daily communication, weather forecast, literary works or description of natural disasters.