Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - Describe the hot weather

Describe the hot weather

1. The weather is sultry, there is no wind, and the thick air seems to be frozen.

2. The clods on the ground are boiling hot, and a few dark brown crickets with big bellies jump around like springs.

Those ironware are like baked sweet potatoes in the summer sun, which makes people afraid to touch them.

4. In the hot sun, on both sides of the road, mature grain is so hot that it bends down and lowers its head. Grasshoppers are as numerous as grass leaves, making a weak and noisy sound in wheat fields and rye fields and among the reeds on the shore.

In midsummer, it is so hot that even dragonflies only dare to fly to the tree, as if they were afraid that the sun would burn their wings.

6. In June, the sun hung in the blue sky like a fireball, and the clouds seemed to be melted by the sun and disappeared without a trace.

7. The summer sun is like a big fireball, scorching the earth, and seems to give off all the heat. He softened the asphalt road, dyed the faces of pedestrians red, rolled up the leaves on the roadside, bowed the crops and hid the flowers in the leaves. When a basin of water falls on the ground, the ground will be hot, like a thirsty person drinking a basin of water at once.