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"Due to expectedly inclement weather conditions..."
My first thought was that expected weather seems more natural than expectedly weather, and the inclusion of word inclement does not affect that. Due to expected inclement weather conditions, we are canceling tomorrow's picnic. If you use the adjective expected – instead of the adverb expectedly – then it sounds just fine.
How to justify a delay simply [closed] - English Language Learners ...
Jun 1, 2016 · How can I justify a delay in office due inclement bad weather..actual case is my flight got delayed by 3 hrs and I reached late to office, because of such delay production has hampered. Now clients...
How VS. What is the weather forecast? Which one is correct?
Sep 21, 2019 · How is tomorrow's weather forecast looking? How is the weather looking tomorrow? In both sentences, the addition of looking alters the meaning of the sentence enough that it's clear it's not asking about methods of forecasting the weather.
Highest scored 'sentence-construction' questions - Page 96
Sep 9, 2019 · This tag is used for questions about the proper construction of sentences.
All Questions - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
How to justify a delay simply [closed] How can I justify a delay in office due inclement bad weather..actual case is my flight got delayed by 3 hrs and I reached late to office, because of such delay production has hampered.
usage of "in spite of" for weather - English Language Learners …
Your weather sentences are all correct (even if "despite it being hot" or "although it was hot" might sound a bit more elegant). "In spite of" can be followed by a passive - e.g. "in spite of having been disappointed, she was still determined to succeed" or "in spite of being shot, he's still alive".
Questions tagged [phrase-usage] - English Language Learners …
Nov 2, 2024 · Grammar doubts about dedication and aknowledgements sections of my thesis [closed] I know proofreading is not allowed. Just have some specific questions. It's a dedication and aknowledgements sections of my thesis. Are these expressions common in English? I just did a direct ... phrase-usage formality formal-language biotech 143 asked Jul 15 ...
What is the difference between "shut" and "close"?
Mar 13, 2019 · Indeed, one may close a window, but to also shutter it is to add protection against storms and/or wild animals, so "shut" is stronger than "closed". The manager closed the restaurant at night, but the health inspector shut it down.
to be due something - in the meaning of expecting, owing
Jan 15, 2015 · According to this Wiktionary page, A small number of English adjectives take noun phrase complements. CGEL lists only four: due, like, unlike, and worth. Underweight and probably overweight are also in this class. There may be others. So, "a major cyber attack.." is a complement that the adjective due takes in your sentence. The meaning, again according to Wiktionary's entry on due, is "owed ...
Preposition usage with “system”, or a circumstance
Regardless, the correct word to use with weather is in: I wouldn't jog in this weather. We go out in the rain and out in bad weather. Once you're outside, you're in whatever type of inclement weather there is. Under doesn't make sense. You aren't under rain, for example; the rain is falling all around you. You're in the midst of it.