I keep a collection of descriptions that have pulled me into the books I read. I’m fascinated how authors can–in just a few words–put me in the middle of their story and make me want to stay there. This one’s 160+ Ways to Describe Weather.
A note: These are for inspiration only. They can’t be copied because they’ve been pulled directly from an author’s copyrighted manuscript (intellectual property is immediately copyrighted when published).
Evening
- Evening shadows deepened into blue and purple.
- The shadows retreated.
- Sun was sinking toward the horizon, the pitiless white ball now an angry orange.
- Fading afternoon in early June
- Evening sky had turned to molten brass.
- Sun still cast a faint yellow light through Slowly gathering evening.
- Daylight had begun to drain away.
- one-quarter of a moonlit night
- cold light
- silver-white moon hung
- A half-moon rests in the fronds over our heads.
- watching the horizon drain of color
- The shadows slipped up the rocks as though the world were drowning in darkness.
- deepening shadows made it a city of ghosts
- barely visible in the fading light
- the high heavens
- Darkness settled around him.
- watching the horizon drain of color
- The shadows slipped up the rocks.
- Evening was crisp already, the last of sunset just a fading pale stripe in the western sky.
- darkening river
- the moon golden at dawn, turn purple just before sunset in the rainy season, sometimes has white and black stripes created by volcanic ash, calm and clear sometimes attended by only a single cloud
- humpback shapes of conical hills
- The last rays of sun skimmed the surface.
- late afternoon sun
- velvety darkness
- night shattered like a mirror
- the Southern Cross lying on its side, the green meadow bathed in the humid light of the sinking sun
- full dusk
- The corners have just about disappeared into the shadows.
Night
- black branches that traced the blue-black heavens overhead
- far away down the night sky
- full moon a pale blue-white disk
- night sky dull black
- Stars were remote pinpricks.
- one-quarter of a moonlit night
- cold light
- silver-white moon hung
- a half-moon rests in the fronds over our heads
- inky blackness
- Thick clouds blotted out the stars.
- A thin layer of clouds masked the full moon, filling the room with blue light.
Day
- Sun cast a luminescent glow.
- The day was out of sync with his mood.
Sunny
- beautiful, 82 degrees, mild breeze, cloudless sunshine, a day for looking at a ball game
- The air was cool but the sun was out.
Windy
- The wind blew itself out overnight.
- a web of clouds, back-lit by the failing sun, mist billowed through the trees and over the fields and hung low in the air, masking the camp in a ghostly gray
- towering thunder clouds
- Clouds threatening, but no rain predicted the 45-mile per hour gusts of drizzly wind.
- dense fog
- brown cloud that passes for air
- a wedge of sunlight bursting past the narrow window
- The wind was icy and withering.
- Heads bowed against the gusting wind.
Dusty
- Grit grated in his teeth. Dust was everywhere, blowing on the wind, leaving its scent in his nostrils.
- as dust motes drifted
Horizon
- thirty miles over the horizon
- razor edge of the horizon
Fog/Mist
- cinder dust and gloom
- The haze floated over the crowd like smoke from a doused fire.
- Sun hanging in a pink haze of clouds and smog.
- Fog yellowed by agricultural burning.
- Fog began to billow across the road in a great grey mass like the effluent of a thousand smokestacks. The building was only a shadowy form, almost entirely lost to view.
- Headlamps of cars did little to pierce the gloom.
- The mist floated like smoke out of the cypress in the swamp.
Cloudy
- dark clouds drifting over the hills
- night was pitch
- slice of sky
- thick clouds blotted out the stars
- a thin layer of clouds masked the full moon, filling the room with blue light
- cool restful shady world with light filtering lazily through the treetops that meet high overhead and shut out the direct sunlight
- saw the anvil of cloud coming in. “A thunderstorm.”
- Cumulus clouds falling down to the…
- A light breeze whispered through the trees.
- cloud shadows
- first cumulus clouds darkening into thunderheads
Humid
- hold humidity like a sponge holds water
- thick heat of the growing morning
- fierce humidity
- windless heat
- It was surprisingly hot. He could feel the sweat roll down his sides and the dampness of the box up against his chest.
- Even with the breeze, the air remained thick and hot, and it stills tank of petroleum.
Sky
- sky as gray-white and sunless
- inky blackness
- against the fading layers of orange, yellow
Morning
- shoulders hunched against the early morning damp and cool
- fused warm light of dawn now creeping down the summit
- bathed in sunlight
- gold shadow not three inches from his leg
Cold
- his breath steaming in the air
- Snow pelted his face and he pulled up the collar of his overcoat to further shield him from the bitter weather.
- rubbed his arms
Winter
- A harsh winter wind blew out of a midnight sky. It roared out of the frigid north and thrashed the brooking forest. The force of it bent trees, whipping their bare branches like angry lashes. Shrieking across the river.
- Cold was like that, seeping through her seven layers of clothing, attacking seams and zipper tracks and spots of thin insulation. The exposed skin on her face felt as if it had been touched with lit cigarettes.
- frigid Friday morning
- swirling snow
- winter’s naked branches created a black tracework
- The sun was climbing out of the deep well of winter, but it was still brutally cold.
- winter colors daubed the land in colors of brown and gray
- sunny, crisp and cool
- The crisp air and clear sky energized his thoughts.
Rainy weather
- grey wet morning
- rain-swept and unpleasantly chilly
- A flurry of rain stung my face.
- Cold rain was beating down on my windshield.
- The sky was leaden.
- The wind was icy and withering.
- Downpour started in the early evening and continued on through the night, a heavy pelting of water that thundered against rooftops and drowned out the sound of all else. By morning, city streets were shallow rivers rushing toward the ocean.
- Rain ran down the window, the streets gleamed.
- rain-swept
- damp paving stones
- By the time it reaches the ground, it has spent its energy.
- windshield wipers barely keeping up with the cold, hard rain
- The rain came steady and cold against the windshield and rattled on the roof of the car.
- turned her head away and looked out my window, where it had gotten dark and shiny with the lights glistening off the rain.
- The maple trees were black and slick in the rain, their bare branches shiny. The flower bed was a soggy matting of dead stems.
- The sky was low and gray.
- Air was swollen.
- the rain was steady and warm and vertical
- drizzly rain
- The sleety rain drizzled down, not very hard and not very fast, but steady.
- Rain came down so hard it almost hurt, stinging the skin and blowing into the eyes and nose and mouth, but in the forest its fall is broken by the trees.
- saw a distant flash of lightning, counted the seconds, and then said, “six miles, more or less.”
People in hot weather:
- Heat wave hit, temperatures went soaring.
- The heat hit them like a hand in the face.
- strode into the dusk, into the stifling heat
- The heat smacked the grin off his face.
- Burst back into the blistering hot sun. Sweat immediately beaded across her brow. She could feel her T-shirt glue itself stickily to her skin.
- I could feel the sweat form along my backbone and trickle down.
- She slogged forward, feeling blotches of dark gray sweat bloom across the front of her T-shirt, while more trailed down the small of her back.
- slogging across pavement as hot as ash in August.
- white dress shirt, sharply pressed this morning, was now plastered against his chest
- already short of breath, his lungs laboring as they headed down the path
- still wrung out from working in the heat
- Take your shirt off. Pop your underwear in the freezer. Dump a tray of ice cubes on your bed. Throw back some chilled vodka shots before you go to sleep.
- The semi-drought slowly draining the life out of the grass and trees.
- Only 7 in the morning, and already stocky hot. *** had a sheen across his forehead.
- Sweat tricked from his forehead which he wiped with the back of his knotted, callused hand.
- hundred degree heat, burning sun and parching salt
- ninety-five outside, probably a hundred in the car. Not great weather for polyester suits
- a fresh drop of sweat teared up on her brow and made a slow, wet path down the plane of her cheek
- walking through a hair dryer
- The heat slammed her like a blow.
- *** cranked the air-conditioning. She stripped off her sweat-soaked clothes, climbed into the shower and scrubbed.
- answered the phone while used the other hand to wipe the sweat from the back of her neck. God this heat was unbearable. The humidity level had picked up on Sunday and hadn’t done a thing to improve since.
- *** thin green sundress was already plastered to her body while she could feel fresh dewdrops of moisture trickle stickily down between her breast.
- Cradled the phone closer to her damp ear
- Her face shiny with sweat.
Summer
- Summer sun remained a brilliant, blinding white. No shade existed for miles and the heat rising up from the baked earth was brutal.
- The summer heat came off the tarmac in waves.
Hot Weather
- While the mercury climbed to a hundred degrees. Efforts started strong, then petered out. People got hot, got tired, got busy with other things—inside things.
- Seemed to be bracing himself for leaving the cool comfort of air-conditioning behind and bursting once more into the heat
- The heat settled in on them, rolling in like a heavy blanket and pressing them deep into their chairs while their clothing glued to their skin.
- Even my teeth are sweating
- The sun beat down relentlessly; even with the AC cranked up, she could feel the heat.
- She could already feel sweat trickle down her back.
- The sun burned white-hot overhead.
- glass exploding from the heat of the sun
- vanish in the dry season’s brown leaves
Click for the complete list of 69 writer’s themed descriptions.
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Jacqui Murray is the author of the popular Man vs. Nature saga, the Rowe-Delamagente thrillers, and the acclaimed Building a Midshipman, the story of her daughter’s journey from high school to United States Naval Academy. She is also the author/editor of over a hundred books on integrating tech into education, adjunct professor of technology in education, blog webmaster, an Amazon Vine Voice, and a freelance journalist on tech ed topics. Look for her next prehistoric fiction, Savage Land Winter 2024
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Pingback: How’s The Weather In Your Story? – Writer's Treasure Chest
Weaving words so perfectly – Thanks for sharing.
And overnight, a transformation. Summer at last.,, .
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These really inspire me. I often read through my collections when I’m stuck.
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helped my writing
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Thanks!
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Reblogged this on Coffee82 and commented:
Awesome.
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Nice collection! A lot of poetic and inventive phrasing there.
✨🙏🕉🌱🌿🌳🌻💚🕊☯🐉✨
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Weather is so many different things to different people. Not surprising I found 160 descriptions of it.
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Ha! yes – that got me thinking about the old “Number of words for snow” question, and I found this. As a Scot myself though I have to say I am very, very skeptical of the final claim in that article!
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I’ve heard of that, too. Luckily, my folks don’t have that problem but it is truly an issue if you’re writing about present-day groups in snowy lands.
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Appreciate your list of ways to describe the weather. Timeless too. Here I am 2 years since your post and inspired by your creativity. Take care, Steve
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It is timeless, isn’t it! When I put this list together, it helped me to better appreciate weather.
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Impressive list. (Mine, now!) I’m compiling one for similes. Raymond Chandler makes me smile with his off the wall analogies. I recently added a Writing Terms Checklist on my free checklists page. It was too long for a post. Thanks for all you do!
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I like checklists. I’ll check yours out!
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Hi Jacqui, Thanks for reading my modest post. What an accomplished woman you are!
What would we do without words, eh! Cheers. Joy x
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Thanks, Joy. I enjoyed your thoughts. It’s amazing what inspired such accomplished writers as the Brontes.
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Excellent list, Jacqui. I even get lots of ideas for titles, something I’m always struggling with entering competitions.
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I grab these from books I read. You can probably tell I favor thrillers, action. I like ‘weather’ and ‘setting’ to be a character as much as the others.
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That’s an amazing compilation. Thanks for sharing!!
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Thanks! These sorts of lists inspire me.
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An awesome post, Jacqui. Thank you. Weather intrigues. It is joy-filled and sometimes furious. God is bowling upstairs during a thunderstorm. Be well and enjoy the week. ox
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Thanks–weather is fascinating. I like when I can feel it through an author’s words.
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Indeed and thank you, Jacqui. Word play is an enjoyable activity. We have about seven months of winter, two days of spring and then summer at our end of the pond in Upstate New York. I love my four seasons. Be well.
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7 months of winter. I didn’t know NY was that cold! Good to know so I never move there!
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Jacqui, I laughed at your comment. We live near Lake Ontario and Oneida Lake and get frequent lake effect snow storms in winter. When I first moved to this area, I learned about lake effect snowstorms. We have excellent snow removal though so come on over sometime. Colorful in Autumn too.
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Pingback: Episode 129: A Dark and Stormy Night – #WriteOnSC Radio Show and Craft School
These are great, Jacqui! And yes, inspirational. It’s good to see how other authors describe things; it gives ideas on alternates.
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It is. There are some very clever minds out there.
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What an epic list 😀 Reminds me of a ‘music’ video we were recommended to watch for university called ’50 words for snow.’ It’s fun to think of different ways to describe things!
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That must be put out by Eskimos. They know more about snow than anyone I’ve seen.
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That’s a long list, Jacqui. So many ways to tell the day. Thanks for sharing this!
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It’s one of my longest! Who knew?
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That’s a lot of ideas for talking about the weather 🙂
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Dinner party chat.
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Quite eloquent 🙂
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These lists are so inspirational! Thank you for posting this.
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It is pretty interesting to view weather through so many literary eyes, innit?
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Yes, indeed. I learn so much. 🙂
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great list Jacqui. i use the weather regularly in my stories to create a specific mood. thanks for the info.
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A bit of unexpected inspiration. Who knew weather was so interesting?
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exactly, Jacqui. i also post weather images regularly on instagram. especially the colours of sunrises and sunsets in clouds during different seasons and different weather conditions.
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Interesting post, Jacqui. Thanks.
I highlight memorable phrases in the Kindle books I read. Although I no longer transcribe them into a file on my computer (too time-consuming), the mere act of highlighting imprints the phrases in my mind. If an author particularly impresses me, I can scroll through the highlights and reread the highlights for inspiration.
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That’s how I do it, too. I like it so well, I’ve migrated from being a print book reader to a Kindle reader.
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It’s nice to see the wide variety of language. Not that it is needy. I can describe the weather currently in my area in one word — sucky! 😀
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Ah South Korea. It rained most of the time on my one visit there. And no one but me seemed to care!
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We’re having a monsoon right now. Don’t remember having a good one of these for a while.
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I remember my son telling me July was the typhoon season, which is why we visited in May. Stay safe!
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Nothing that crazy. We had a tropical depression pass through, but that’s it. It’s just wet.
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I love the idea of keeping a notebook with descriptions that catch your attention. I’m going to start doing this.
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Mine is so long,d I added a table of contents with links to the sections! I’m a bit nuts about it.
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I love the way you compile and share these lists with us, Jacqui. They are amazing and so helpful. Can I confess something? I share some of them with my creative writing students, and then give them prompts where they have to include 3 or more things from your lists. Will be interesting to see how I do that with weather. 🙂
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This one got a little long. Who knew there were so many clever ways to describe weather?
I am flattered you share them! I would say weather could surprise them.
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This one IS long – but weather gives us a lot to talk about and a lot to experience. I love the list. I will say, the prompt my students seem to love the best is. (are you sitting down?) “It was a dark and stormy night…”
🙂
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Reblogged this on Marina Costa and commented:
Interesting and useful to know.
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Thanks for sharing, Marina!
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The English should love this…
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I would say India not so much. Do you-all get anything other than hot and humid or too-darn-windy?
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What a helpful post, Jacqui! It reminds me of how we can put effort into our descriptions.
BTW, you won a book on my blog. Please confirm there.
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Ooh, sorry I missed that. I just went over and replied and then emailed my info to you. How exciting!
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Reblogged this on quirkywritingcorner and commented:
I love her lists of descriptions. I hope you find them as helpful as I do.
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Thanks for sharing this! It puts to bed any thought that weather is boring, doesn’t it?
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That’s quite a collection, Jacqui. Isn’t it amazing that each of us can conjure something unique?
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It is! Next time you don’t know what to say to someone, you can eruditely talk about the weather!
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That’s so funny. Weather ‘small’ talk. Who would’ve thought. 😂
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Great post. That’s a wonderful collection
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Thank you so much, Luisa. It’s hard to make weather interesting but some very clever authors have done just that.
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🤗🎈🤗🎈🤗
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Jacqui, I love this post. The more I have been reading, the more I recognize how important it is for authors to paint a picture in your mind. To be able to put you right in the middle of the books setting. Sometimes when my mind has trailed off the story, it is descriptions like these that put my mind right back in.
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That’s true, innit. A little inspiration to start your day.
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I love your descriptions of weather and the times of day. Such descriptions can help add a sense of time in a story (just as the phases of the moon or the stars can create time (crescent moon in evening is aa new waxing moon, crescent moon in morning before sunrise is a waxing moon just before the “dark of the moon” which are the three days the moon is in the shadow of the earth. As for stars: Orion in winter, Scorpus in summer, etc). The dog star in Canis Major, Sirius, the brightest star in the sky, rising in late summer (as it rises just before daylight) is linked to “dog days” of summer…
I also like the old graveside prayer that describes the end of life:
“until the shadows lengthen
and the busy world is hushed,
and the fever of life is over,
then in thy mercy
grant us a safe lodging
and a holy rest
and peace at last.”
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What a wonderful poem. I’ve copied it. It captures so much of the fear and hope.
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Thanks for these awesome examples, Jacqui! Saving and sharing…
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It’s always fun to talk about the weather, innit?
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Sure is! 🙂
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New Jersey weather: moist ‘n’ icky.
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Good description, especially the ‘icky’.
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I calls ‘em like I sees ‘em.
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Oh my, Jacqui. I love your lists and that’s a good long one. Great thought starters. Thanks for sharing your collection!
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Since we-all know we must cover weather, I thought these were clever asnd interesting ways to do that!
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Ha ha ha. I love weather. 😀
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Right now there is only one way to describe the weather here in my city: hot
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Here, too, though I have an excellent fan in my home office.
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Some great phrases here, Jacqui. I am reading The Long Walk by Bachman/King at the moment and that has some very descriptive phrases in it.
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Oooh, I’ll have to look at him. I love nature writers.
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It’s not a nature book, it is a dark psychological horror.
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Woah! OK, that’s different!
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Darn! All the things I was about to write! 😀
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Hehee. These are beyond most of what I write but I’ve seen what you turn out. Excellent.
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Wonderful post!
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Thanks, Ed. Food for thought…
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A lot, just wonderful and so helpful.
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My goodness …. can I just say ‘HOT’ … luckily today it’s cooler with a sea breeze … I need to read them all – clever and thank you! Cheers Hilary
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Hot works. Absolutely.
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Hahaha can I just say HOT, or the weather outside is weather yeah?
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What a wonderful list, Jacqui! These are descriptions that always make me pause and reread them to fully enjoy them. They do draw the reader deep the story. I enjoyed reading these, thanks:)
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Thanks! They do that for me, too, and that’s why I couldn’t just read and move on. I had to note them!
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Some of these are quite lovely. Thanks for sharing.
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If you recognized them from your outdoors scenes, feel free to add a note!
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I actually didn’t recognize any of them. 🤔
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OMG, Jacqui. What an amazing list Thanks for sharing.
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It’s really nice for those whose plots take place outdoors a lot!
BTW, finished your book. Couldn’t stop reading. Wonderful.
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Thank you, Jacqui. You put a smile on my face:)
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Wow, great post. Bookmarking.
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Amazing how much there is to say about the weather, innit?
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I love weather, the seasons, earth and sky. There were some lovely gems in this collection. Thanks for sharing.
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Thanks, Mae. I didn’t used to think much about the weather until I had to write about it, and make it interesting! These really struck me.
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A terrific resource Jacqui. Thank you.
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Thanks so much, Brigid. I couldn’t believe how many weather descriptors I had!
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Nice information thanks
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Thanks! Everyone writes about weather, right?
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Great list, Jacqui. Thanks so much for sharing.
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Thanks, Jill. Who says weather isn’t interesting? Hmm??
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I think I’d like to be a meteorologist in my next life. 🙂
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Reblogged this on chrismakan.
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Thanks for sharing!
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Wow this is very educative
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I love how some writers weave their words so perfectly.
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Lol
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