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  • Vanessa: Hi, I'm Vanessa from, SpeakEnglishWithVanessa.com.

  • Are you ready to talk about the weather?

  • Let's do it.

  • Vanessa: Have you ever felt like you use the same words

  • again and again?

  • It's a sunny day.

  • I think it's going to rain.

  • Those are great, but do you know what, there are so many more natural expressions to describe

  • the weather and because weather is one of the most common small talk topics, this is

  • a great way to master something and feel confident in it.

  • Every day, you can just look outside, look out the window, describe the weather in English

  • and you're building your vocabulary step by step.

  • Some English websites and textbooks use hundreds of weather expressions, but we don't really

  • use those in daily life, unless your job is to be the weatherman on TV.

  • So I have good news, today I'm going to share with you 100 real English weather expressions

  • that we definitely use in daily life and I hope that you can too.

  • Vanessa: I broke down these 100 expressions into some

  • different categories.

  • So today we're going to talk about how to describe the sun, sky, air, rain, cold, temperature,

  • and some common questions that you're going to hear and you can ask to talk about the

  • weather.

  • All right, let's get started by talking about the sun.

  • There are three common sentence structures that we use to talk about the weather.

  • You could say, "It's sunny, it's a sunny day or more casually, it's a sunny one today."

  • I'm going to be using those three pretty simple sentence structures throughout this lesson,

  • so I hope that you'll feel confident and comfortable using them yourself.

  • Let's change out that word sunny.

  • Sunny is just a generic term for the sun is shining, but what else could you say to be

  • a little bit more specific?

  • "It's nice and warm today.

  • It's March now, so at the end of winter, it's really nice to have a day that is nice and

  • warm."

  • Vanessa: Those two words usually go together or you

  • might say, "Oh, it's a bright one today.

  • The sun is really bright."

  • Great expression.

  • "Oh man, it's hot.

  • It's a hot one today."

  • All of these expressions are getting stronger and stronger.

  • They're getting warmer and warmer, hotter and hotter.

  • Or you could say, "It's boiling."

  • When you boil water, bubbles form in the water and that is extremely hot.

  • Of course, this is an exaggeration, but you're probably going to see that in a lot of these

  • weather expressions, they are exaggerations, "It's boiling."

  • Or you can say, "It's scorching.

  • And this kind of feels like your in an oven.

  • "It is scorching or it's a scorching one today."

  • Or you could say, "It's a scorcher."

  • That means it's really hot.

  • Sometimes when it's hot outside, the air texture is also different, so you might say, "It's

  • muggy, it's humid, it feels like you're swimming outside."

  • Vanessa: You can get the sense that the air is thick

  • with moisture.

  • It's not because it's raining, but just because it feels like a swimming pool.

  • You're sweating, the air is thick.

  • If you've experienced weather like this, you definitely know what it's like.

  • Here where I live, in the summer, it's pretty common to have humid weather.

  • The air is humid or it just feels muggy.

  • It's kind of miserable in my opinion, but that's pretty common when you have hot weather,

  • it's sometimes also muggy.

  • Vanessa: All right.

  • What we're going to do now is I have a special segment for you.

  • You're going to be seeing my husband, Dan and I looking at some weather pictures that

  • have to do with vocabulary we just talked about and Dan and I are going to briefly have

  • a quick conversation about those pictures describing the weather.

  • So you're going to hear us naturally describe them.

  • You might hear some of the same words, you might hear different new words, but I hope

  • that you'll be able to see that, yeah, we really use these in daily life.

  • All right, let's go.

  • I'm here with my husband, Dan.

  • Dan: Hello.

  • Vanessa: If you can see us small in the little corner

  • over here and we're going to be talking about these four pictures that have to do with the

  • words that you just learned or maybe you'll learn some new words.

  • So when you look at this first picture of the guy snowboarding, how would you describe

  • the weather of that picture?

  • Dan: Well, I'd probably say first it's a really

  • clear and sunny day.

  • Honestly, I'd probably say it's cold first, just because there's snow, but then I'd follow

  • it up with, it's very clear and sunny or I'd say it's a perfect day for snowboarding.

  • Vanessa: Oh yeah.

  • It looks really bright, the way the sun is reflecting, especially off the camera.

  • It looks like a bright day, clear, sunny.

  • But compared to that, what about the next picture of the boat?

  • Dan: The top right one?

  • Vanessa: Yeah.

  • Dan: Yeah, the picture of the boat, I would say

  • it's misty, although I suppose it could be pretty humid.

  • I'm not sure.

  • What would you say?

  • Vanessa: Yeah, I would say misty, humid, muggy.

  • If this is in the South of the US, I imagine that it's pretty muggy, even if this is the

  • early morning hours.

  • Dan: Yeah, muggy is like when you walk outside

  • and you feel the water on your body, it's basically the same thing as humid.

  • Vanessa: Yeah.

  • Which might relate to the next picture in the jungle.

  • Dan: Yeah, in that jungle, I would definitely say

  • humid.

  • It just looks really wet in there and you could probably feel the water.

  • When you breathe, you feel like you're breathing in thick air.

  • Could even say, thick.

  • Thick and muggy.

  • Vanessa: Thick, muggy, humid.

  • Usually this is not ideal conditions for me, but some of you that might be the norm.

  • What about the last picture, which is kind of the opposite of what we just talked about?

  • Dan: Yeah, so the first word I would use to describe

  • this would just be dry, but it's because of all that broken ground there, but you could

  • say it's scorched, scorched earth, or scorching hot.

  • Vanessa: Ah, yes.

  • We can use the word scorched in a couple of different ways.

  • It's scorched earth.

  • It's scorching outside.

  • The weather's scorchy.

  • It's a scorcher.

  • Sure, we can say all of those things.

  • Dan: It's a scorcher, that's more slang.

  • Vanessa: Yeah.

  • Great.

  • Thanks for your help.

  • Dan: You're welcome.

  • Vanessa: I hope you enjoyed that special segment.

  • Now we're going to go onto the next category, which is describing types of sky or air.

  • It's clear.

  • It's a clear day, not a cloud in the sky.

  • That's a common expression that we use to talk about a clear day, not a cloud in the

  • sky.

  • You could add there's, at the beginning, there's not a cloud in the sky, but if you just want

  • it to be more casual, cut it off and say, "Whoa, not a cloud in the sky today."

  • Perfectly fine.

  • But what if there are some clouds?

  • You could simply say, "It's cloudy or it's partially cloudy."

  • That means that there's some clouds, but it's not completely cloudy.

  • It's cloudy, it's partially cloudy, or it's overcast.

  • This kind of has a dark feeling to this word, it's overcast.

  • That means that you can't see any sky at all.

  • Vanessa: In fact, today, it is completely overcast.

  • There is no sun.

  • It's overcast.

  • It's kind of darker than it would normally be because you can't see the sun through the

  • clouds.

  • Or you might say, "It looks threatening."

  • Threatening.

  • What is threatening you here?

  • Are the clouds coming down and saying, "Vanessa, you better behave."

  • No.

  • In this situation, it looks like rain is most definitely going to happen, or some kind of

  • storm is coming.

  • You can imagine dark clouds, maybe they're moving quickly.

  • Maybe the shape of the clouds makes you think, ah, there's probably going to be a big storm.

  • So if you're hiking and you look up and you see threatening clouds, you can use this expression,

  • "It looks threatening.

  • I think we should turn back."

  • Threatening.

  • Vanessa: In the spring especially, it's pretty common

  • for it to be windy.

  • It's a windy day or, oh, it's pretty breezy.

  • I need to tie my hair back, it's breezy.

  • What about the word blustery?

  • Now this is a little bit more formal and I feel like you're more likely to hear this

  • on a TV weather program, it's a blustery day today.

  • But you might hear some people use this in daily life.

  • It's a blustery one today, just kind of in a casual way to say, "Oh, it's really windy.

  • The wind is blowing pretty strongly.

  • It's not a hurricane or anything, but it's still a blustery day.

  • It's a breezy day or it's simply windy."

  • Now it's time to go onto the special section with my husband, Dan, where we're going to

  • be describing some pictures of the sky or of the wind.

  • Let's go.

  • Here we have four new pictures talking about the sky or the air.

  • Dan: Lots of mountains in these pictures.

  • Vanessa: Yeah.

  • When I was looking at pictures- Dan:

  • I want to go to these places, it looks really pretty.

  • Vanessa: A lot of them had mountains or the ocean.

  • I guess that's kind of the most picturesque places to take pictures.

  • But what would you say about this top left picture?

  • The one that has some houses in it.

  • Dan: There's some a wispy clouds in this photograph.

  • But just in general, I'd say it's partly cloudy.

  • That's what I would say.

  • Vanessa: It's not completely clear.

  • It's just partly cloudy.

  • I think that's exact expression I would use as well.

  • Dan: That's what the weatherman would say.

  • Vanessa: Yeah and us.

  • What about the next one with these rugged mountains?

  • This is actually in Hawaii.

  • Super cool.

  • Dan: I would just keep it simple again and just

  • say cloudy, it's a cloudy day.

  • Vanessa: I would say it's overcast because there's

  • no sun.

  • It's kind of dreary and dark.

  • And when you have an overcast day, you can't see any sun.

  • But in that first picture you can see some sun, you can see the blue sky through the

  • clouds, but when it's overcast it's just completely covered in clouds, like that picture.

  • Dan: Yeah.

  • And if you get a few days of that in a row, some people might say it's just miserable

  • outside and they're probably talking about a sky that's gray.

  • Vanessa: Yeah, a gray sky.

  • Dan: So it's a gray sky.

  • Vanessa: What about the next one?

  • Where the clouds are a little bit darker?

  • Dan: Yeah, I would again probably say cloudy first,

  • but I could say it looks potentially stormy, like it might rain soon.

  • Vanessa: I would use the word threatening because if

  • I was hiking and I saw the clouds roll in like this, I would probably say, "Oh, I should

  • find some shelter or we should find our way back to our car."

  • Dan: Do you think you'd say the clouds look threatening

  • or would you just say it looks threatening out there?

  • Vanessa: Oh, I think you could say either, the clouds

  • looked threatening or just it looks threatening, simply it.

  • The weather.

  • The sky looks threatening.

  • What about the last one though?

  • Beautiful day.

  • Dan: Well, again, it's a partly cloudy day, but

  • it looks quite windy.

  • It looks very windy or breezy.

  • I'm not in the photograph, so I don't know how strong the wind is blowing, but usually

  • when you're standing near a body of water, the wind is coming in your face.

  • Kind of refreshing.

  • Vanessa: It's a little bit breezy, a little bit windy.

  • I probably wouldn't say that this is blustery.

  • Dan: Could be though.

  • Vanessa: I feel like blustery is a little bit more

  • chaotic, it's not a comfortable wind.

  • But this is a beautiful water beach scene that might be a little more comfortable.

  • Dan: Certainly not raging.

  • Vanessa: Yeah, not a raging wind.

  • Dan: Do you say raging winds?

  • Vanessa: Yeah.

  • Dan: Some people might.

  • Vanessa: Or a raging storm.

  • Well, thanks so much for your help with these words.

  • Dan: You're welcome.

  • Vanessa: I hope you enjoyed that segment where we talked

  • about the sky.

  • Next we're going to be talking about types of rain.

  • I noticed when I was writing and trying to do some research for this lesson, that there

  • are a lot of descriptions for rain and cold weather.

  • Maybe it's because English originated in England and it's pretty common weather to have lots

  • of rain.

  • But there are significantly more expressions to talk about, downfall, things that are coming

  • out of the sky, precipitation, than just a sunny or a cloudy day.

  • So let's get started.

  • A common sentence structure that you might hear is, they're calling for rain or they

  • said it's going to rain.

  • Who is they?

  • They here is simply the weather channel, maybe even the app on your phone.

  • A lot of people don't even watch the weather on TV anymore, they just look on an app on

  • their phone, but you can still use they, they're calling for rain.

  • Somebody, maybe some program wrote that on your phone and it's just that you're not the

  • one deciding it, they are calling for rain.

  • They said it's going to rain.

  • Vanessa: Now let's talk about different levels of precipitation.

  • Precipitation could be anything falling from the sky, but in this section, we're talking

  • about rain.

  • What about if it's just a little bit, you can say it's foggy.

  • It's foggy.

  • When it's foggy, you don't need a rain jacket, you don't need an umbrella.

  • It's just a little bit difficult to see outside.

  • It's foggy or it's hazy.

  • Hazy is pretty much the same thing as foggy.

  • There is a dense moisture in the air.

  • It's not muggy because here it's a little bit closer to rain, but you still probably

  • will get a little bit moist, but it's not going to be rain.

  • Then we have misty.

  • It's misty outside today.

  • This, in my opinion, is kind of the most annoying rain because you don't really need an umbrella,

  • but you're still going to get wet.

  • It's just misty.

  • Vanessa: It kind of feels like your walking close to

  • a waterfall and the waterfall is kind of pushing some moisture out at you.

  • You're not getting soaked, but you're still getting wet.

  • This is kind of typical British weather, in my opinion, misty, or you could say it's drizzling.

  • Now here we're getting a little bit more serious.

  • When it's drizzling outside, you look outside and say, "Oh, it's drizzling.

  • I definitely need an umbrella."

  • And you can't really do an awful lot outside, in my opinion, when it's drizzling.

  • It's not exploding out of the sky, it's just drizzling, but it's stronger than mist.

  • You might hear in some formal situation someone say, "Oh, they're calling for a rain shower,

  • or I think there's going to be a rain shower today."

  • I feel like this is a little bit too formal for casual conversation.

  • Vanessa: If my husband asked me, "Do you know what

  • the weather's going to be like today?"

  • I wouldn't say, "They're calling for a rain shower."

  • You might say, "There's going to be showers in the afternoon."

  • But to say a rain shower feels a little bit formal, so I recommend using some of these

  • other expressions too.

  • What happens if it's more than hazy, more than misty, more than drizzling?

  • You could say it's pouring.

  • You can imagine you have a cup of water and you just pour it into another container.

  • There is a lot of water.

  • It's pouring outside or you might use a noun and say there's a downpour.

  • There is a downpour.

  • These are both pretty strong.

  • There's a lot of rain coming out of the sky.

  • Vanessa: A common expression that you might hear is

  • simply it's coming down or it's really coming down.

  • Or you could say it's really coming down out there.

  • If you look out the window and it's just a wall of water because there's so much rain,

  • you might say, "Oh, it's really coming down out there."

  • And that just means it's raining a lot.

  • Here in the US and maybe where you're from too, people tend to have kind of negative

  • attitudes about rainy days like, ah, it's so rainy.

  • It's not a positive or happy day.

  • It's just a rainy day.

  • So we also have some kind of negative sentences that you can use to talk about what it's like

  • when it's raining.

  • Vanessa: You might say, "Oh, it's just a wet day.

  • It's just a wet day.

  • Everything outside is wet.

  • The moment I go outside, I'm wet, everything's wet.

  • It's just a wet day."

  • Or you could say, "It's a nasty day to day.

  • It's a gross day today."

  • Maybe if you had plans to do something outside and then you look outside and you can tell

  • that the rain isn't going to stop anytime soon.

  • It's just pouring and it's probably a little bit cold.

  • It's not a nice warm spring rain, it's just cold pouring rain.

  • That is the perfect time to say, "Oh, it's just nasty out there.

  • Oh, what gross weather today."

  • Saying nasty and gross to describe the weather.

  • Sorry weather.

  • All right, let's go to our special segment with Dan where you're going to see us describing

  • some pictures of rain.

  • All right.

  • Now we have four more pictures talking about types of rain.

  • Dan: wetness.

  • Vanessa: Yes.

  • Type of liquid or something that's in the air.

  • What would you say about this first picture that has this nice cliff?

  • Dan: I would say it's foggy.

  • It's just a very foggy day.

  • There's not good visibility out there.

  • Vanessa: Not good visibility.

  • It's foggy.

  • Yep.

  • I think people say that as well.

  • Dan: People say low visibility as well.

  • Vanessa: There's low visibility, especially if you're

  • giving a warning about driving, like, "Be careful driving.

  • There's low visibility because it's really foggy."

  • What about the next picture, this couple with the umbrella?

  • Dan: Yeah.

  • It's kind of hard to tell how hard it's raining in this picture, but it's certainly raining.

  • It doesn't look like a downpour.

  • I would say it might be drizzling perhaps.

  • Vanessa: Yeah.

  • I think drizzling, maybe a light shower.

  • Dan: Light shower, yes.

  • Vanessa: Yeah.

  • They're still walking.

  • They have an umbrella, but they're not trying to hide inside.

  • Dan: Yeah, do you think they're happy?

  • Vanessa: Yeah.

  • They're in nature, why not?

  • Dan: They seem happy, they're holding arms.

  • This is a beautiful afternoon.

  • Vanessa: I think if that were us, I'd be pretty happy.

  • Dan: Yeah, they're definitely going to kiss soon,

  • I think.

  • That's my feeling.

  • Vanessa: Oh, I see.

  • What about the third picture?

  • The girl with the umbrella inside on this kind of blue gloomy day.

  • Dan: Yeah, it does look gloomy.

  • I would definitely say it's raining.

  • It just looks generally raining, although it might be pouring.

  • Vanessa: I would say this is the perfect example of

  • a gross day.

  • It's just gross outside.

  • It's nasty.

  • You don't want to go outside for more than three seconds.

  • Just run to the next place that you have to go to.

  • It's not like the other picture, you're not going to take a nice walk with an umbrella.

  • No, it's just full of those kind of bad feelings that you get when you have a completely overcast

  • sky, it's raining, there's a lot of water on the ground.

  • It's a gross day.

  • Dan: Yeah.

  • It looks like the kind of day where the rain is just kind of continuing all day.

  • It's not a shower because usually if you say it's a shower, it comes and goes.

  • I would say the rain shower is for an hour, two hours, less, who knows?

  • Vanessa: This is a continual rain all day.

  • It's a gross day.

  • What about the last picture?

  • Dan: Yeah, that looks like the strongest rain of

  • all of them.

  • I'd say this is a downpour or if you're inside and somebody asks you what's what the weather

  • is like outside, you would say it's pouring.

  • Vanessa: Yep.

  • It's pouring.

  • Someone has just poured their cup from the sky down and it's pouring, continuous rain.

  • Would you ever say it's raining cats and dogs?

  • Have you ever said that in real life?

  • Dan: I have said that but only as a joke, maybe

  • I was a kid.

  • Vanessa: This is kind of like one of the first idioms

  • that English learners learn, I feel like native speakers never or hardly ever use that to

  • describe whether like that.

  • Dan: You might get a smile if you said it's raining

  • cats and dogs outside.

  • People might, they might laugh a little bit.

  • Vanessa: But that's the only context when you'll actually

  • hear people use that in real life, is just as a little joke.

  • Well thanks for talking about these rain pictures with me.

  • Dan: You're welcome.

  • Vanessa: Did you hear some of those expressions that

  • we just talked about to do with the rain?

  • I hope so.

  • Let's go to our next category, which is describing types of cold.

  • There are two sentences that you can use to talk about the changing of time, the changing

  • of temperature, especially between seasons.

  • You could say, "It's getting cooler outside or it's getting colder outside."

  • You usually use this maybe between summer and fall, it's getting cooler outside, but

  • you could even use this right before a rainstorm in the summer.

  • Maybe it's extremely hot and you're excited that it's getting cooler outside.

  • Finally, it's getting cooler outside.

  • And we're using that verb, get, to talk about some kind of action that's happening.

  • It's getting or becoming cooler.

  • But the verb get, is a little bit more natural in this situation.

  • It's getting colder.

  • It's getting cooler.

  • Vanessa: Especially now that we can almost predict

  • the weather using different apps and looking at the weather on TV, you'll probably going

  • to hear and you could say, "There's a cold front coming up next week."

  • A cold front means just there's going to be a lot of cold weather coming in next week.

  • It could be because of some Arctic winds or maybe it's just something that's happening

  • regionally, but that's a common expression you'll hear.

  • There's a cold front coming in.

  • Or if it is actually getting quite cold, you might say, "Make sure you bundle up."

  • This is a great phrasal verb that means wear your hat, scarf, gloves, winter coat, winter

  • boots.

  • Make sure you bundle up.

  • Vanessa: When it gets really cold, not fall weather,

  • but winter weather, you can say, "I can see my breath."

  • This is a great way to kind of judge the temperature.

  • When you go outside and you breathe out, if you can see your breath, then it means it's

  • pretty cold.

  • The air is cooler than your body temperature, than the air coming out.

  • And then sometimes something that we say when we're talking about judging the weather, the

  • temperature, "Oh, I could see my breath in the car or is the heat on in our house?

  • I can see my breath."

  • That means it's still a little bit cold.

  • And what's a common precipitation when it's cold outside?

  • Snow.

  • So you might say, "It's freezing.

  • Oh, it's freezing."

  • It just means it's extremely cold.

  • Vanessa: But what comes after freezing?

  • It's snowing.

  • Usually, at least where I live in the South of the US, the first snow is pretty exciting.

  • If you live in the North somewhere where snow is extremely common, maybe the first snow

  • is exciting, but then two months later, if you've had continuous snow for two months,

  • it's not so exciting anymore.

  • But where I live, it's not common to get snow, maybe three times in the winter we'll have

  • a couple of days with snow.

  • So it's really exciting.

  • So whenever there's snow, everyone shouts, "It's snowing, look outside, it's snowing."

  • When it's not too cold outside, but it's still snowing, you might describe this by saying,

  • "There are just a few flurries."

  • Flurries means occasional snowflakes.

  • It's not pouring from the sky with snowflakes, but instead there's just a few flurries.

  • Vanessa: Or when you look at the ground, you might

  • say, "Yeah, it's snowing, but it's not sticking."

  • This means it's not staying on the ground.

  • The ground is warmer than the snow, so it's just melting the moment that it hits the ground.

  • This is every child's sad moments that, "Oh, it's snowing.

  • Oh, and then it's not sticking.

  • I can't go sledding.

  • I can't make a snowman.

  • I can't throw snowballs."

  • Because it's not sticking, I can just look outside and see snow.

  • But some snow does stick and the way that we can describe this type of snow, there's

  • a lot of different words that you might see online, but some of the most common ways is

  • just to say, "Wow, this is great snowball snow.

  • Or you can pack the snowballs really easily with this."

  • So you might be talking about the texture of the snow.

  • Vanessa: When you pick up snow, sometimes it's powdery.

  • So you might say the snow is powdery.

  • It just kind of falls apart like flour or sugar in your hands.

  • But if it is good for making snowballs, you could say, "Oh, I can pack it really well.

  • It's great for making snowballs."

  • After the snow melts a little bit, there is a not so beautiful thing that happens and

  • on the roads and maybe on the sidewalks, maybe in your yard, it is slushy or it's icy.

  • Slushy means that it's not hard ice, but it's kind of broken up ice, it's wet ice and usually

  • if it's on the road it's kind of black or gray because of all the cars.

  • It's not beautiful, but it's a common thing that happens.

  • It's slushy, it's icy, watch out where you walk because the sidewalk is pretty slushy

  • or the sidewalk is icy.

  • Whenever there's a lot of ice outside, you'll definitely hear warnings about ice, such as

  • watch out for black ice on the road.

  • Vanessa: What is black ice?

  • Well, because the road is made of asphalt, which is a black color, sometimes the ice

  • melts and it becomes what they call black ice and it's not completely melted, it's still

  • icy but you can't see it, so it's kind of like invisible ice.

  • So basically this warning, watch out for black ice, means just be careful while you're driving

  • because you might not see all of the ice that's actually there.

  • Watch out for black ice.

  • Have you ever experienced icy conditions in the summer?

  • I have and it is so weird, especially because I live in the South.

  • This is called hail.

  • Vanessa: Hail can happen at any time during the year

  • and it can even happen in this summer.

  • Hail is like a ball of ice falling from the sky and if it's small, it's not so terrible,

  • but if it's big, sometimes they describe this as golf ball sized hail or baseball sized

  • hail or softball size hail.

  • I have never heard basketball sized hail, maybe because that's kind of impossible.

  • But if you have golf ball sized hail falling from the sky and it's hitting your car, it's

  • hitting your plants, it's hitting your roof, that can be extremely damaging.

  • So at least whenever there's a hail warning, people usually try to put their cars under

  • cover or cover up their plants or do something to protect their property because hail can

  • be pretty dangerous.

  • Vanessa: And finally, before we get to the extra section

  • with my husband, Dan, you might say, "It's the dead of winter."

  • It's the dead of winter.

  • You can also use this for summer.

  • It's the dead of summer, but I feel like it's more common about winter.

  • That means it's maybe January or the end of January, you feel like it's the middle of

  • the winter.

  • It's been the winter for so long.

  • You feel like it's going to be winter for so much longer in the future.

  • It's the dead of winter.

  • I feel so sad, which is a common condition that happens during the winter.

  • You're not outside that much.

  • You don't get as much sunshine, so you could say, "It's the dead of winter."

  • Vanessa: All right, let's go to the extra section where

  • you're going to see us describing some pictures that have to do with snow and ice.

  • All right.

  • Now we have four more pictures of cold weather.

  • How would you describe this picture of a horse?

  • Dan: Well, he looks kind of sad out there, doesn't

  • he?

  • You can see his breath, so it's probably pretty cold.

  • It doesn't look like it's that humid out there, although there's a lot of snow on the ground

  • or some snow on the ground.

  • It could potentially even be freezing out there.

  • If you walk outside and it's so cold, then you can just describe it as freezing.

  • Vanessa: It's freezing.

  • Yeah.

  • I think there's kind of a light dusting of snow on the ground, it's not thick packed

  • with several feet of snow, but just the light dusting of snow.

  • Probably not a terrible day, bundle up and you'll be fine.

  • What about the next picture, the city picture?

  • Dan: Yeah.

  • This one looks maybe a little more risky if you're on the road driving, so I might describe

  • the ground as icy or potentially slushy.

  • It's hard to tell exactly how hard the ice is, but if it's not solid ice, if it's a little

  • bit wet than you call it slush.

  • Vanessa: Yeah.

  • Especially after it snowed for a while and cars have driven on it or people have walked

  • on it, it gets kind of gross, kind of gray snow, that's not so pretty anymore.

  • Dan: It looks like a pretty big snow though too.

  • So I might say the snow is deep or the ground is covered.

  • Vanessa: Yep.

  • Yep.

  • What about a picture of this guy throwing a snowball?

  • Dan: He looks like he's having fun.

  • Actually, he doesn't look like he's having fun, it's like, you're dead.

  • Vanessa: I'm going to throw this snowballing and get

  • you.

  • Dan: Well anyways, I mean obviously it's snowy,

  • but the snow, you might say it's powdery snow and it can form a snowball really well.

  • Vanessa: Easy to pack.

  • Dan: Yeah.

  • Or the ground is covered.

  • Again, these are things I might say.

  • Vanessa: I would say that he's really bundled up.

  • He has a hat.

  • The hat is also covering his ears.

  • He's got a coat and gloves, so he's completely bundled up.

  • He might even be able to pull a scarf over his face or over his nose, to bundle up more,

  • but that's a common expression that people might use to tell you it's really cold out

  • there.

  • Bundle up.

  • What about the picture with these poor sheep?

  • Dan: They do look a little lonely and sad out there.

  • Vanessa: They've got a lot of wool though.

  • Dan: Maybe not lonely, but cold.

  • Vanessa: Pretty cold.

  • Dan: You would just say it's snowing first of all,

  • but they're pretty big snow flurries and it's kind of low visibility.

  • So you might say it's snowing hard.

  • I think people say it's snowing hard a lot when it snows that much.

  • Vanessa: It's really coming down out there.

  • Dan: Ooh, it's really coming down.

  • Which you can also use for rain, I believe too.

  • Vanessa: Yeah.

  • Yeah.

  • Dan: But yeah, I would say it's not quite a blizzard.

  • So a blizzard, you couldn't see a thing and it would be probably nighttime and the wind

  • would be blowing all over the place.

  • Vanessa: You probably would put your animals in some

  • kind of shelter, I hope.

  • Well, I've never had sheep, so maybe they're really hardy.

  • But in this situation I would also say that it seems like the flurries are just sticking

  • to the ground.

  • It's not thick with snow yet, but they're just sticking.

  • So we don't know if they're going to melt when they touch the ground or if they're going

  • to stick, but they seem to be just sticking.

  • It's recently happened.

  • Great.

  • Thanks so much for talking about this.

  • Dan: You're welcome.

  • Vanessa: I hope you caught some of those great cold

  • expressions.

  • Next we're going to be talking about how to talk about temperature specifically.

  • What about these two sentences?

  • How could you say these?

  • Well, you might say, "It's 20 degrees."

  • But what about that second one?

  • You could say, "It's minus 20 degrees or it's negative 20 degrees or it's 20 degrees below

  • zero."

  • There are a lot of more various ways to talk about negative temperatures than positive

  • temperatures, so you could simply say, "It's 20 degrees.

  • Okay, that's a beautiful day.

  • It's 20 degrees."

  • But if it is minus 20 degrees, you probably need to bundle up.

  • You got to watch out for some black ice while you're driving.

  • It is negative 20 degrees.

  • It's minus 20 degrees or it's 20 degrees below zero.

  • Vanessa: If you want it to be a little bit more general

  • about the weather, you could say, "It's above freezing."

  • Which could be like three degrees or it's below freezing, which is negative three degrees,

  • minus three degrees.

  • Or you could just say, "It's below zero."

  • And that means the temperature is negative.

  • Those three expressions are pretty common.

  • And of course I need to mention that in the US we use Fahrenheit and in pretty much the

  • rest of the world you use Celsius.

  • So just be aware if you are listening to maybe an American weather channel, they're probably

  • going to tell the temperature in Fahrenheit.

  • Or if you're watching a movie and they're talking about the temperature, if they're

  • American, it's most definitely going to be in Fahrenheit.

  • Vanessa: For me, I feel a little bit ashamed because

  • I've lived in a lot of other countries around the world where they use Celsius, but I still

  • struggle with converting the two.

  • I know that 20 degrees Celsius is generally a good temperature, 30 is really hot.

  • I know zero is freezing, but between that I have difficulty converting because it's

  • something that comes so natural for me to use Fahrenheit.

  • So just be aware whoever you're talking with that you use the correct version.

  • Let's go to the extra section where you're going to see Dan and I describing the temperature.

  • All right.

  • Here we have two pictures from our life.

  • Dan: I know these people.

  • Vanessa: Yeah, this is a year ago, I guess, a little

  • bit more than a year ago.

  • Dan: Yeah a little over a year.

  • Vanessa: When we built the snowman, there was a fun

  • snow that happened in our city and the other picture's a little bit more recent, when it

  • was just kind of a cold day.

  • So how would you describe specifically the temperature of the first picture with the

  • snowman?

  • Dan: Yeah, so it's 28 degrees Fahrenheit, but it's

  • minus two degrees Celsius.

  • And it's interesting because in America we don't use Celsius.

  • Vanessa: I wish we did.

  • Dan: So we rarely say minus for a temperature.

  • So if it's a minus temperature, you're really like, it's minus five out there.

  • It's so cold.

  • But in other countries it might just be like it's a little below freezing.

  • It's minus two.

  • Vanessa: Yeah, it's not so bad, but if it's actually

  • going to be minus in Fahrenheit, it is extremely cold.

  • So it's just the difference between Fahrenheit and Celsius.

  • Dan: Yeah.

  • And I would also say, you probably wouldn't say this unless somebody asked you what the

  • temperature is.

  • You wouldn't come inside and be like, "It's 28 degrees out there."

  • You would probably be like, "It's freezing out there."

  • If you're talking casually, you're just going to say the general feeling, not necessarily

  • the specific temperature.

  • Vanessa: Yeah, but often I like to look at my phone

  • and look at the weather app to see what the temperature is.

  • So if I look at the temperature and I want to tell Dan what that temperature specifically

  • is, then I could say, "Oh, it's 40 degrees or it says it's 40 but it feels like 35 or

  • feels like 30."

  • And that means, usually we call that the wind chill because of the wind, it feels colder

  • than it actually is.

  • And that's usually how it is around here, it usually feels colder than it actually is.

  • What about that second picture with the log, with our two year old son?

  • Dan: Well as you can see, it's above freezing out

  • there.

  • It's 38 degrees Fahrenheit or three degrees Celsius.

  • It's not very comfortable unless you're wearing a nice big coat.

  • Vanessa: Yep.

  • You've got a bundle up and he is the definition of bundled up in this picture.

  • Well, we still had a good time, even though it was around freezing, it was above freezing,

  • but it still felt pretty cold.

  • I remember on that day, even though it felt like, even though it was 38 degrees, it still

  • felt like it was below freezing.

  • Dan: With the wind chill and whatnot.

  • Vanessa: Yeah, with the wind chill.

  • Great.

  • Well thanks so much for talking to me about these weather pictures.

  • Dan: You're welcome.

  • Vanessa: Did you hear some of those temperature expressions

  • with Dan?

  • I hope so.

  • Let's go on to our final category, which are four common questions that you will hear and

  • that you can also ask to talk about the weather.

  • What's the weather like today?

  • What's the temperature today?

  • How's the weather?

  • What's it like outside.

  • Those final two, I feel like those are generally when you want some advice about how you should

  • dress.

  • Should I bring my umbrella?

  • Should I put on my snow boots?

  • How's the weather?

  • What's the weather like outside?

  • Okay, well I need some advice for what I should wear.

  • These are common questions that you can ask other people.

  • They will ask you and I hope that this lesson prepared you with some great specific answers

  • that you can give.

  • Vanessa: And now I have a question for you, in the

  • comments, let me know what's the weather like today in your city?

  • Let us know and make sure you look through all of the comments because you'll probably

  • see some of these expressions used.

  • It's a great way to just refresh your memory and remember all of the things that you learned.

  • Thanks so much for learning English with me and I'll see you again next Friday for a new

  • lesson here on my YouTube channel.

  • Bye.

  • The next step is to download my free ebook, five steps to becoming a confident English

  • speaker.

  • You'll learn what you need to do to speak confidently and fluently.

  • Don't forget to subscribe to my YouTube channel for more free lessons.

  • Thanks so much.

  • Bye.

Vanessa: Hi, I'm Vanessa from, SpeakEnglishWithVanessa.com.

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100 Weather Expressions in English: Advanced Vocabulary Lesson

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    Justin Ho に公開 2021 年 07 月 12 日
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