Weather and general statements

QuestionAnswer
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