How VS. What is the weather forecast? Which one is correct? How is tomorrow's weather forecast looking? How is the weather looking tomorrow? In both sentences, the addition of looking alters the meaning of the sentence enough that it's clear it's not asking about methods of forecasting the weather To address a comment about forecast versus forecasted: Forecast is both a verb and a noun
grammar - Is If it is rain tomorrow incorrect? - English Language . . . The reason this sentence is confusing is the ambiguous "it is" Depending on what the listener believes you are referring to, the sentence may take on different meanings "The forecast for today is 'rain' again " "If it (the forecast) is 'rain' tomorrow, we won't go to the park " In this case, "rain" is a quote about the weather Since it is a quote, it does not have a tense and is correct
Can “wish the weather would be good tomorrow” be correct? 0 I wish the weather would improve tomorrow=grammatical I wish the weather were going to be good tomorrow =grammatical For it to be grammatical with regard to the future, you have to introduce the expectation, which is expressed using the past continuous subjunctive or regular past continuous to express an unreal situation in the present
word usage - Is it wrong to say Monday is rainy? - English Language . . . NBC TV weather The canoe looks like something we might see tomorrow Unfortunately the weather goes decidedly downhill after Friday Saturday is rainy and cooler, and Sunday is single digits C with a chance of snow! Cruisecritic_UK Weather Equation Example 3 25 Suppose Monday is sunny Then Tuesday is sunny with probability 3 4
Wrong answer in a test (that doesnt seem wrong) Contrast with the correct The teacher asked the students not to use dictionaries in the test tomorrow The teacher would rather the students _ haven't used dictionaries in the test tomorrow This is a tense mismatch, past tense versus tomorrow Compare with At the teacher's request, the students haven't used dictionaries in recent tests
future tense - Is there tomorrow or Will there be tomorrow? - English . . . You can give different examples about the topic Another one with more detail in the context: According to weather forecast it is heavily snowy tomorrow Are there any matches in Premier League or are they postponed? or, According to weather forecast it is heavily snowy tomorrow Will there be any matches in Premier League or are they postponed?
word usage - It is raining or it is rainy? - English Language . . . To describe what is actually happening right now, you use the verb form: It is raining To describe the sort of day it is, you use the adjective form: Today is a rainy day In your first sentence, either rainy or raining could fit, depending on what you actually want to say; " because it is raining" indicates that water is physically falling from the sky right now, while "because it is
Is it okay to say My two next lesson? For example, although there is a word "tomorrow" there is no word for the next day after tomorrow We are forced to use "The day after tomorrow" or other clumsy expressions, so normally we would say "On Saturday" (given that today is Thursday) So you would normally find some other way to specify the lesson
What is the difference between “except” and “except for?” The trip was perfect, except for the weather So a simple way to think about it: except → more general, can be used in more structures except for → often used to highlight the one thing that breaks an otherwise true statement