Search results
Jul 26, 2018 · Both can be fine. While the first focuses more on the objective description of the weather, and the second focuses more on someone's subjective opinion of the weather, the answer can go either way, depending on how the listener chooses to interpret the question.
Mar 29, 2015 · What does the weather forecast look like? while: What is the weather like? would be: What is the weather look like right now? Of course, more context would help determine whether or not I've made the correct assumptions. Consider these dialogs: We're supposed to go to the game tonight. What does the weather look like?
I always confused when talking about today, yesterday or tomorrow (etc.) in nominal sentences, and I'm not sure if it's necessary to add them pronoun or not. For example: Today (it?) is my brother's birthday. tomorrow (it?) will be my brother's birthday. yesterday (it) was my brother's birthday.
It's possible that snowy would work, but snowing is more similar to foggy. Both foggy and snowing are weather conditions. Roughly speaking both foggy and snowing mean the sky is filled with fog or snow respectively. Snowy, however, is not a weather condition. Snowy is a more general term than snowing, meaning things are covered with snow. It ...
It's nice weather today. I like the weather today. They roughly mean the same thing, but the second one is more personal. (And of course, if I like weather that is not usually considered nice, they may mean something different.) Nice to see you.
Nov 5, 2023 · "Until today" includes today so the statement is valid for today, or the second part of the sentence tells the reader the contrary : this morning belongs to the past and the action is finished (the argument). The sentence will read better with past (had been getting or was getting) May be "until today" does not include today
Feb 9, 2016 · Because today is a span of time and not a set point, i.e. noon or 3 0'clock, you can use all tenses, it just depends when you anchor what you're saying at a particular time. Using different tenses will put you either at the beginning of the day or end of the day. I will watch TV today I am watching TV today I watched TV today I have watched ...
I asked a friend to meet up in person. He said we can meet tomorrow. What is the correct way to ask if he still going to come to the meeting?
The statement sounds like it is about the holiday you just had in the past, in which case you could respond with "Thank you, I did", or "Thank you, I had a lovely holiday"
Jan 16, 2015 · We had the most dreariest weather today. Unfortunately, I lost the person (most) dear to me when he stepped on a landmine. Yours sincerely, Roxanne. Note: most dearest is considered nonstandard, because both most and -est mark the quality superlative.