| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| It's cold | Hladno je To make a general statement (its cold, its late, its hot, its fun), you just add your adverb (description word) and then the word 'to be', literally translated: "cold is" |
| It's cold today | Danas je hladno Hladno je danas (also correct) |
| It's very hot today (formal) | Danas je vrlo vruće vrlo - very (formal
jako - very (less formal) |
| It's too hot | Prevruće je The prefix -pre means 'too (much)', prevruće - too hot, prehladno - too cold, premračno - too dark |
| It's very cold today (informal) | Danas je jako hladno |
| It's terribly boring | Užasno je dosadno Užasno/strašno - terrible (in this context) |
| It isn't cold | Nije hladno To make a negation, just add -ni before the 'biti' |
| It's not hot at all | Uopće nije vruće Uopće - at all |
| It's not sunny today | Danas nije sunčano |
| It's warm here | Ovdje je toplo Ovdje and tu mostly mean the same thing |
| It's cloudy outside | Vani je oblačno |
| It's snowing | Pada snijeg Padati - to fall, literally: "snow is falling" |
| It's raining | pada kiša |
| It's windy (Wind is blowing) | Puše vjetar Puhati - to blow |
| The wind is blowing strong | Jako puše vjetar You can use 'jako' to intensify some events but be careful, its not always used the same as 'vrlo' |
| What's the weather like? | Kakvo je vrijeme? If you wanna ask about the weather, you should use 'Kakvo' |
| How goes it? | Kako je? If you wanna ask more generic questions that don't refer to the state of anything specific, you use 'kako' |
| Its snowing heavily | Jako pada snijeg |
| Its boring there | Tamo je dosadno |
| It's raining here | Ovdje pada kiša |