Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - When you write an English diary, do you want to write a week and the weather?

When you write an English diary, do you want to write a week and the weather?

English diary usually consists of two parts: the end of the book and the text. Diaries often record what they see, hear, do and think in the first person. The format of Chinese and English diaries is roughly the same. The end of an English diary is dedicated to writing the date, week and weather of the diary. In the upper left corner is the date (year, month, day) and the week. Write down the weather conditions of the day in the upper right corner, such as sunny, sunny, rainy, windy, snowy and cloudy. There are many forms of date expressions. When writing the year, month and day, it is generally in the order of month, day and year. Months can be abbreviated, and days and years are separated by commas. For example: December 18, 2003 or Dec. 18, 2003a) Separate1,2004 or separate 1st, 2004 can also be omitted. 1, 2004 or separate.65438.b) September 2004 1ST (months cannot be abbreviated) b) Only months, days, and September 654332. Weeks can also be omitted, either before or after the date. There is no punctuation between the week and the date, but it should be blank, and the week can also be abbreviated. Such as: 20041Saturday, October 22nd; ; Saturday, October 22nd, 2004/KLOC-0. Weather conditions are crucial. Weather is generally expressed by an adjective, such as sunny, sunny, rainy and snowy days. Write it after the date, separated by commas, and in the upper right corner of the diary. Such as: Saturday, March 4, 2004, windy; ; 1 2004 1 month 1 day, fined.