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word choice - weather permitting or permitting weather? - English . . . To me, cloud permitting, together, is an adjective phrase that modifies weather So, based on this opinion, the author is trying to say that a weather that is cloud permitting has begun to clear up So the clouds are starting to move away, allowing for clear, sunny weather, instead of cloudy weather
How do I express the weather being helpful to my plans? I know there's the expression "weather permitting", but I want to use it like this: I plan to go on a bike ride tomorrow, so let's hope the weather ____! Is there a word more idiomatic than "permits" for this context?
Hop aboard - TOEIC TOEFL English learning forum Hello teachers and friends Please tell me what does " Hop abroad" mean Hop aboard a summer lake cruise, weather permitting, and catch a glimpse of the famed “Old Man of the Lake,” a large tree stump that has been floating vertically in the cold water for nearly a century
What is the weather today? or How is the weather today? 16 If I want to ask about the weather today whether is cold or hot, worm or cloudy or foggy, rainy or snowy etc What should I choose of these two (or may be there's another way)?
word choice - Can I use pretty, quite etc with weather? - English . . . Can I use "pretty", "quite" etc with weather? Not long ago I've been texting with someone and wanted to say "It's pretty freezing here" but hesitated (I'm not native speaker as you might guess), so I decided to ask here if it's correct to say like this
Whats the weather like vs. Hows the weather? - TOEIC TOEFL English . . . It makes sense! But the teacher keeps saying it’s What’s the weather like? My doubt comes from there… Your teacher is wrong 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
Quote: The tree on the mountain. . . - English Vocabulary, Grammar and . . . Hello everybody Could you please check if my interpretations of the following quotes are correct? 😃 (Source: Reader’s Digest, November 2000) 1- “The tree on the mountain takes whatever the weather brings If it has any choice at all, it is in putting down roots as deeply as possible ” I think the writer is comparing the “tree on the mountain” with a human being A person has to