How do you ask about the weather?
Some questions you might hear
- Is it hot or cold?
- Is it sunny, should I take sunglasses?
- Is it raining outside?
- Should I take my umbrella?
- What’s the weather forecast?
- What’s the weather expected to be tomorrow?
- What’s the temperature?
- How’s the weather?
What was the weather like or how was the weather?
Both “How is the weather?” and “What is the weather like?” are perfectly correct, grammatical English, and native speakers ask both of those questions all the time.
How do you respond to how’s the weather?
You may well ask someone “How’s the weather?” and get the reply “It’s amazing. It’s hot and sunny with clear blue skies and I haven’t seen a cloud for three weeks!” or ask someone else “What’s the weather like?” and just get “It’s OK”.
How would you describe breezy weather?
Breezy is described as a sustained wind speed from 15-25 mph. Windy is a sustained wind speed from 20-30 mph. Sustained winds between 30-40 mph.
How do I ask the weather tomorrow?
What will the weather be like tomorrow? What is the weather going to be like tomorrow? What is the weather forcast for tomorrow? Are there any other ways to say?
How do you describe weather in English?
Describing the weather rainy, wet, humid, dry, arid, frigid, foggy, windy, stormy, breezy, windless, calm, still; a spell of good weather; a two-day spell of sunny weather; a spell of rainy weather; Sky: cloudy, overcast, cloudless, clear, bright, blue, gray (BrE grey), dark; a patch of blue sky.
What are some examples of weather?
Weather includes sunshine, rain, cloud cover, winds, hail, snow, sleet, freezing rain, flooding, blizzards, ice storms, thunderstorms, steady rains from a cold front or warm front, excessive heat, heat waves and more. They also provide Special Weather Statements and Short and Long Term Forecasts.
What’s the weather like in English?
Starts here2:32What’s the weather like? Learning basic English conversation – YouTubeYouTube
How’s the weather today meaning?
When someone says “how is the weather” they mean “what is the weather outside (is it cold, worm, windy, humid, stuff like that.)”
Whats the weather like meaning?
“What’s the weather like by you?” is a casual regionalism in US English, meaning “What’s the weather like where you are at?” It’s not really correct, but in some areas it’s acceptable. Also I wanted to know. If I wanted to know, “How does it look like at you (or by you)?”
How do you describe good weather?
Words Describing Pleasant Weather
- calm – very little wind.
- clear – no clouds, rain, etc.
- clement – pleasant because it is neither very hot nor very cold.
- cloudless – no clouds in the sky.
- equable – does not change very much.
- fair – pleasant and not raining.
- fine – sunny and not raining.