Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - What good weather is it or what good weather is it?

What good weather is it or what good weather is it?

What a nice day!

Weather means "weather" and is an uncountable noun. No matter what adjective is used in front, you can't use the article a /an in front.

Sentence structure of exclamatory sentence: what+(a/an)+adj+n+ (subject+predicate)!

In which exclamatory sentences, when nouns are uncountable or plural, there is no article in front. When the meaning of exclamatory sentences is clear, sometimes the subject and predicate can be omitted.

What a nice day!

English pronunciation: [w? T method? n? We (r)]

English interpreter: What a nice day!

Example:

What a beautiful day, isn't it?

What a nice climate, isn't it?

Extended data

Usage of fine:

Fine is a descriptive adjective, which basically means that it becomes very fine after processing and refining, and can be extended to "beautiful, excellent, excellent, outstanding", "slender", "fine", "sunny, no rain" and "healthy; Comfortable, exaggerated, ostentatious, terrible, terrible and so on.

Fine is usually used as the subject when it means that the weather is "good"

Fine can be decorated very front.

Fine is used as an attribute or predicative in a sentence.

The comparative level of fine is fine, and the highest level is fine.

Fine for "health; A "comfortable" solution has no comparative level or superlative level. "