Weather Vocabulary

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  1. Weather Vocabulary List
  2. Weather Vocabulary
  3. Weather Vocabulary Worksheet

Vocabulary exercises to help learn words for talking about the weather. Try to say the words for each picture in Weather after you hear them. Also write down the 'World - weather' topic words you see on the screen. Writing down the words a few times will help you to remember the vocabulary even better than just saying it. Quick lesson (flash only). The seasons and weather vocabulary are words you can practice on a daily basis and they are very useful. It's worth the time to learn these words. Listen to the video to hear the correct pronunciation — in American English — and practice saying the words out loud during the pauses.

Lesson Topics

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  • Unit One
    • 1. Gender of Nouns I
    • 2. Gender of Nouns II
    • 3. Numbers: 1-10
    • 4. Plural Forms of Nouns
    • 5. Def. & Indef. Articles
    • 6. The Verb Form 'hay'
    • 7. Subject Pronouns
    • 8. Reg. Verbs I
    • 9. Reg. Verbs II
    • 10. Reg. Verbs III
    • 11. Adjectives I
    • 12. Adjectives II
    • 13. Days of the Week
    • 14. Numbers: 11-30
  • Unit Two
    • 15. Ser and Estar I
    • 16. Ser and Estar II
    • 17. Ser and Estar III
    • 18. Ser and Estar IV
    • 19. Negation
    • 20. Questions
    • 21. Poss. Adjectives
    • 22. Tener, venir
    • 23. Tener que / Hay que
    • 24. Exp. with 'Tener'
    • 25. Weather Expressions
    • 26. The Personal 'a'
    • 27. Contractions
  • Unit Three
    • 28. Stem-Changing Verbs: o:ue
    • 29. Stem-Changing Verbs: e:ie
    • 30. Stem-changing verbs: e:i
    • 31. Estar, Ir, Dar
    • 32. 'Ir a' + infinitive
    • 33. Acabar de
    • 34. Volver a
    • 35. Ordinal Numbers
    • 36. Months, Seasons, and Dates
    • 37. Comparisons of Inequality
    • 38. Comparisons of Equality
    • 39. Superlatives
  • Unit Four
    • 40. Pronouns as Objects of Prepositions
    • 41. Dir. Object Pronouns I
    • 42. Dir. Object Pronouns II
    • 43. Dir. Object Pronouns III
    • 44. Ind. Object Pronouns I
    • 45. Ind. Object Pronouns II
    • 46. Ind. Object Pronouns III
    • 47. DO and IO Pronouns Together
    • 48. Verbs Like Gustar
    • 49. Present Progressive
    • 50. Verbs with Irregular 1st Persons
  • Unit Five
    • 51. Saber vs Conocer / Pedir vs Preguntar
    • 52. Numbers: 31-1000
    • 53. Telling Time
    • 54. Por and Para
    • 55. Irreg. Comparatives
    • 56. Demonstratives
    • 57. Time Expressions With Hacer
    • 58. Possessive Pronouns
    • 59. Reflexive Verbs I
    • 60. Reflexive Verbs II
    • 61. Definite Article II
  • Unit Six
    • 62. Pret. vs Imp. I
    • 63. Preterite I
    • 64. Imperfect I
    • 65. Preterite II
    • 66. Imperfect II
    • 67. Pret. vs Imp. II
    • 68. Preterite III
    • 69. Imperfect III
    • 70. Preterite IV
    • 71. Preterite V
    • 72. Preterite VI
    • 73. Pret. vs Imp. III
    • 74. Pret. vs Imp. Review
  • Unit Seven
    • 75. 'Hace ..' to mean 'ago'
    • 76. Formation of Adverbs
    • 77. Subjunctive I: Introduction
    • 78. Subjunctive II: Conjugating regular and stem-changing verbs
    • 79. Subjunctive III: Verbs that change orthographically
    • 80. Subjunctive IV: Irregular verbs
    • 81. Subjunctive V: Desire
    • 82. Subjunctive VI: Ignorance, doubt
    • 83. Subjunctive VII: Impersonal Expressions
    • 84. Subjunctive VIII: Actions not yet completed
  • Unit Eight
    • 85. Rel. Pronouns - que
    • 86. Rel. Pronouns - quien
    • 87. Rel. Pronouns - el que and lo que
    • 88. Rel. Adjective - cuyo
    • 89. Rel. Pronouns and Adjectives - Review
    • 90. Formal Commands
    • 91. Inform. Commands - tú
    • 92. Irreg. Commands - tú
    • 93. Using Object Pronouns with Commands
    • 94. Commands Review I
    • 95. Informal Commands - vosotros
    • 96. 1st Person Commands - nosotros
    • 97. Indirect Commands
    • 98. Commands Review II
  • Unit Nine
    • 99. Future
    • 100. Past Participle
    • 101. Present Perfect
    • 102. Past Perfect (Pluperfect)
    • 103. Future Perfect
    • 104. Conditional
    • 105. Imperfect Subjunctive I
    • 106. Imperfect Subjunctive II
    • 107. Imperfect Subjunctive III
    • 108. Rules of Accentuation

Vocabulary - Weather - How's the weather? - Learn English for kids - English educational videoThis 'Kids Voc. Definitions and descriptions of key weather and climate vocabulary words and concepts used in teaching and learning about weather and climate including clouds, climate zones, and fronts.

Weather

Notes:

  1. The written lesson is below.
  2. Links to quizzes, tests, etc. are to the left.

Remember, an idiom is an expression that cannot be immediately understood by analyzing its literal meaning. A few examples of idioms in English are:

to 'drive someone crazy'
to 'lose it'
to be 'raining cats and dogs'

Spanish also has many idiomatic expressions. Although their literal translations sound odd to English speakers, they sound perfectly natural to native speakers. Here is one example:

Idiom: Hace mucho frío

Literally: It makes much cold

True Meaning: It is very cold Pdf protector 1 2 2 download free.

In Spanish, there are a number of idiomatic expressions that employ the verb hacer (literal meaning: to do or to make), and are used to describe the weather.

¿Qué tiempo hace?
What's the weather like?
Hace frío.
It's cold.
Hace calor.
It's hot.
Hace viento.
It's windy.
Hace sol.
It's sunny.
Hace buen tiempo.
The weather is good.
Hace mal tiempo.
The weather is bad.
Hace fresco.
It's brisk.

Like the idioms that use tener, these idioms also contain a noun.

  • el frío
  • el calor
  • el viento
  • el sol
  • el tiempo

Because the idioms use nouns, they are modified by adjectives, not adverbs.

Hace mucho frío.
It's very cold.

There are also weather expressions that use the verb hay:

Hay niebla.
It's foggy.
Hay neblina.
It's misty.
Hay sol.
The sun is shining.
Hay luna.
The moon is out.
Hay relámpagos.
It's lightning.
Hay humedad.
It's humid.
Hay nubes.
It's cloudy.
Hay lluvias torrenciales.
It's pouring.
Hay un vendaval.
There's a windstorm.
Hay granizo.
It's hailing.
Hay lloviznas.
It's sprinkling.
Esl

Notes:

  1. The written lesson is below.
  2. Links to quizzes, tests, etc. are to the left.

Remember, an idiom is an expression that cannot be immediately understood by analyzing its literal meaning. A few examples of idioms in English are:

to 'drive someone crazy'
to 'lose it'
to be 'raining cats and dogs'

Spanish also has many idiomatic expressions. Although their literal translations sound odd to English speakers, they sound perfectly natural to native speakers. Here is one example:

Idiom: Hace mucho frío

Literally: It makes much cold

True Meaning: It is very cold Pdf protector 1 2 2 download free.

In Spanish, there are a number of idiomatic expressions that employ the verb hacer (literal meaning: to do or to make), and are used to describe the weather.

¿Qué tiempo hace?
What's the weather like?
Hace frío.
It's cold.
Hace calor.
It's hot.
Hace viento.
It's windy.
Hace sol.
It's sunny.
Hace buen tiempo.
The weather is good.
Hace mal tiempo.
The weather is bad.
Hace fresco.
It's brisk.

Like the idioms that use tener, these idioms also contain a noun.

  • el frío
  • el calor
  • el viento
  • el sol
  • el tiempo

Because the idioms use nouns, they are modified by adjectives, not adverbs.

Hace mucho frío.
It's very cold.

There are also weather expressions that use the verb hay:

Hay niebla.
It's foggy.
Hay neblina.
It's misty.
Hay sol.
The sun is shining.
Hay luna.
The moon is out.
Hay relámpagos.
It's lightning.
Hay humedad.
It's humid.
Hay nubes.
It's cloudy.
Hay lluvias torrenciales.
It's pouring.
Hay un vendaval.
There's a windstorm.
Hay granizo.
It's hailing.
Hay lloviznas.
It's sprinkling.

Other weather expressions use the verb estar along with an adjective:

Está oscuro.
It's dark.
Está nublado.
It's cloudy.
Está lluvioso.
It's raining.

Other weather expressions simply use a single verb:

Llueve.
It is raining. or It rains.
From the verb llover (to rain)

Nieva.
It is snowing. or It snows.
From the verb nevar (to snow)

Truena.
It is thundering. or It thunders.
From the verb tronar (to thunder)

Llovizna.
It is drizzling. or It drizzles.
From the verb lloviznar (to drizzle)

Here are some common ways to ask about the weather:

  • ¿Qué tiempo hace?
  • ¿Qué clima hace?
  • ¿Cómo está el clima en …?
  • ¿Cómo está el tiempo?
  • ¿Cómo está el clima hoy?

Weather Vocabulary List

The first practice exercise and test will cover ten of the most common and useful of these expressions:

Weather Vocabulary

  • ¿Qué tiempo hace?
  • Hace frío.
  • Hace calor.
  • Hace viento.
  • Hay niebla.
  • Hay granizo.
  • Hay relámpagos.
  • Llovizna.
  • Nieva.
  • Llueve.

Practice exercises 2-4 and test 2 will cover all of the expressions in this lesson.

Weather Vocabulary Worksheet

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