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To my ear, what's the weather like today sounds more natural than what's the weather today. (today you're having a nice weather) How is tomorrow's weather forecast looking
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How is the weather looking tomorrow Please suppose you're going to take a travel in your car for a long distance tomorrow and you are worried if you will have a bad weather 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. 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. My classmate asked me what does the weather look like
This question is very difficult for me to answer, because my english teachers used to teach us what is the weather like He need worry about the weather today He needs worry about the weather today Mostly we see the use of 'need' as modal verb in negative or interrogative sentences where it takes bare infinitive w.
While i found a lot of examples with the form of
Doesn't the grammatical form of question. The reason is that in the first sentence, today is rainy, today is the object being described directly, so you don't need the pronoun 'it' In the second however, there is a comma so after the comma, the 'it' pronoun is needed to make the sentence correct (hence the 'it's'). Feel(v):if you talk about how the weather feels, you describe the weather, especially the temparature or weather or not you think it is going to rain or snow
I have some confusion about this When we say it would be nice if the weather were better. the statement the weather were better is unreal Really, the weather is bad Using were is considered more formal
It is a piece of grammar from older english that is becoming less common in modern english
It is also common in idioms like if i were you