Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - Spanish study: how to express the weather?

Spanish study: how to express the weather?

About Spanish learning: how to express what the weather is like?

How to ask "What's the weather like today?" ?

Qué tiempo hace (hoy)?

Tiempo here means "weather" (in fact, it also means "time"), and the prototype of hace is hacer, which means "doing" in Chinese, which is equivalent to do and make in English, but when expressing weather conditions, the word hacer is fixed, such as Hace sol. It's a sunny day. grandchild

Unlike England, it is sunny here. Because Spanish means weather with hacer, the latter sol is a noun. It is mentioned in the program that in Spanish, it is conceivable that a "person" is "making" a weather situation. (The legendary perspective of God? )

Now we can infer other weather conditions:

Hello. It's windy

Wanto Mi Wende

Hackefrí o is very cold.

Friob Leng

Huck Carroll The weather is very hot.

Calories m. heat

How do you say "the weather is fine"? We know that "Hao" as an adjective is bueno(s)/buena(s), whether to use -o or -a, and whether to add s or not depends on the yin and yang and the singular and plural of the modified noun. However, when modifying masculine singular nouns, the -o at the end needs to be removed, so "sunny weather" = buentimpo.

"The weather is fine" is: Hace buen tiempo.

Similarly, so is bad weather. Among them: maloadj Not good.

How do you say it rains and snows? Although we have

Luvia B.

Xinxue

But! ! When we express rain and snow weather, we don't use hackers+weather nouns, but use verbs directly. This is not difficult to understand, because there is another expression in English called It rains/snows. The corresponding verb is

It is raining.

It's snowing (the third person singular displacement is nieva)

"It's raining and snowing" can be used in the continuous tense (estar+ auxiliary verb): Está lloviendo/nevando.

"It's going to rain and snow" can be expressed by the phrase "ir a+ prototype" (equivalent to English going to):

Va a llover/nevar。 (va is the third person singular displacement of ir)

In fact, "ir a+ prototype" is a universal structure, and the structure of "hacker+weather noun" can also be used:

horse Anava a hacersol/frí o/buentimpo。 Tomorrow will be sunny/rainy/sunny.

When did you come back? Anna. What will the weather be like tomorrow?

Of course, the prototype of ir a+ can also be used by others (the present tense of ir: voy/vas/va/vamos/vais/van). For example, I will learn Spanish tomorrow. Going to Spain? Ol。 The verb hacker/llover/nevar is the third person singular only when it indicates the weather.

Add several adjective forms of weather, which can be preceded by está to indicate weather conditions:

Sunny: soleado (=[ English ]sunny, often used in the daytime) /despejado (=[ English ]clear, often used in the evening)

Cloudy: Nubrado

Yin: muy nublado