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Hungryforlanguage Posted 4 years ago
Grammar

In, on and weather

How would you construct this sentence and why :

How’s the weather in your country?

Or

How’s the weather on your country?


I want to ask this question to English speaking friends but I do not know if I’m using the correct prepositions. Thank you so much for your help!

  

Top answer

hungryforlanguage How would you construct this sentence How’s the weather in your country? hungryforlanguage why No reason. Idiom.

  • hungryforlanguage How would you construct this sentence How’s the weather in your country?
  • hungryforlanguage why No reason.
  • Idiom.
  • That's just the way we put it.
  • By the way, it would have to be a pretty small country to have the same weather all over.
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4 Answers
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hungryforlanguageHow would you construct this sentence

How’s the weather in your country?

hungryforlanguagewhy

No reason. Idiom. That's just the way we put it.

By the way, it would have to be a pretty small country to have the same weather all over. You might mean climate, and even that is local to some exten

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hungryforlanguageHow’s the weather in your country?

It does not make sense. For example, in the United States, it can be below 0°, with high winds and sleet in Alaska, and steaming hot with crystal blue skies in south Florida - both happening at the same time.

The more reasonable questions are:

How’s the weather?

How’s the weather in your

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'in' is idiomatic. Everyone says it.

No-one says 'on.'. It sounds rather silly.

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How’s the weather in your country?

If your friends are currently living in their country, natursl English is

eg How’s the weather there?


I want to ask this question to English speaking friends.

We don't ask a quesion to someone. We ask someone a question.

Clive

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