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Canada-0-EXPLOSIVES 公司名錄
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公司新聞:
- What is the weather today? or How is the weather today?
To my ear, "what's the weather like today" sounds more natural than "what's the weather today"
- Whats the weather like? in Spanish | English to Spanish Translation . . .
Translate What's the weather like? See 3 authoritative translations of What's the weather like? in Spanish with example sentences and audio pronunciations
- Talk About the Weather in Spanish | SpanishDictionary. com
Expert articles and interactive video lessons on how to use the Spanish language Learn about 'por' vs 'para', Spanish pronunciation, typing Spanish accents, and more
- Weather in Spanish | English to Spanish Translation - SpanishDictionary. com
Translate Weather See 9 authoritative translations of Weather in Spanish with example sentences, conjugations and audio pronunciations
- What was the weather like? vs What was the weather?
-1 What's the difference in their meaning? Does the word "like" change something? If I understand it, both sentences ask about the same In that case, is "like" usage a personal habit? What was the weather like? What was the weather?
- Weather forecast in Spanish | English to Spanish Translation . . .
Translate Weather forecast See 3 authoritative translations of Weather forecast in Spanish with example sentences and audio pronunciations
- Whats the natural way to ask about the current degrees of the weather?
What's the weather like now? would normally be answered with a statement about the current wind and or precipitation (rain, snow, ), rather than temperature If you specifically wanted to know the temperature, you'd probably explicitly ask about that
- Should I say Whats that mean or What does it mean?
1 'What's that mean?' translates to 'What does that mean?'—not 'What does it mean?' I'd say that the phrase 'What's that mean?' is a dialect more than anything else, and even in informal speech, 'What does that mean?' is more common and more often understood
- expressions - The usage of What weather is it today? - English . . .
What weather is it today? is "syntactically valid", but not idiomatic On the other hand, you can use the "existential it" construction to ask, for example, What temperature is it today?
- Difference between el tiempo and el clima? - SpanishDict
As the saying goes, climate is what you expect, weather is what you get Clima = climate, referring to long term averages Tiempo = weather, either the generic weather or the actual weather that happens day to day Weather and climate may be synonyms, and they may not, depending on the particular context
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