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Updated on
6 Mar 2017

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  • English (UK)
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Question about English (UK)

I'm studying English using a Cambridge text book about weather.
It says, "sun" is noun and "sunny" is adjective for "sun". And "wind" is noun and "windy" is adjective for "wind".
It also says, "rain" is noun and "wet" is adjective for "rain".
So if you say "it's windy today", it will mean "the wind is blowing today," I suppose.
And then if you say "it's wet today", does it mean "it's raining today"?

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I'm studying English using a Cambridge text book about weather.
It says, "sun" is noun and "sunny" is adjective for "sun". And "wind" is noun and "windy" is adjective for "wind".
It also says, "rain" is noun and "wet" is adjective for "rain".
So if you say "it's windy today", it will mean "the wind is blowing today," I suppose.
And then if you say "it's wet today", does it mean "it's raining today"?
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