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Is “Today weather” instead of “Today's weather” grammatically correct English? [on hold]



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowIt's raining today or it's rainy today?“Nowadays” vs “today”Past simple with todayIs it proper to say “I earned -1 points today” when I lost 1 point?“It's not raining today, isn't it?” vs. “it's not raining today, is it?”Word a male can use to refer to a female that is not old or young (girl/lady/woman)“Our Today's Meeting” or “Our meeting that is scheduled for today”Which adjective is better to describe 'weather' and 'climate' that they are neither cold nor hot?What is preferable way to say the phrase “changeble weather”?Is “I did not breakfast today” correct?










-1















And if not, why? "Today weather" feels OK, but I want to be sure.










share|improve this question















put on hold as off-topic by tchrist 25 mins ago


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Please include the research you’ve done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – tchrist
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
















  • @tchrist Why is it off-topic? I want to know if it's grammatically correct.

    – user161005
    22 mins ago







  • 1





    It is off-topic because you have provided no research. The more work you put into a question, the better the answers you can expect to attract; likewise the less work, the poorer the answers. All “Is this grammatically correct?” questions are personal proofreading requests which will never help future visitors to our site for professional linguists and serious English-language enthusiasts. If you just need to run something past a native speaker for a proofread, that isn't a service we provide outside of our chatroom. Our sister site for English Language Learners may be of use but they too expect research.

    – tchrist
    7 mins ago












  • "Today weather" is a grammatically correct phrase but not as a substitute for "today's weather." In informal English, never formal English, "today" can be used as an adjective, but its meaning as an adjective isn't fitting with your usage. Rather, it means "of the present era" or "of the current times or trends" like when someone says, "That shirt is very today." dictionary.com/browse/today#

    – Benjamin Harman
    6 mins ago
















-1















And if not, why? "Today weather" feels OK, but I want to be sure.










share|improve this question















put on hold as off-topic by tchrist 25 mins ago


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Please include the research you’ve done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – tchrist
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
















  • @tchrist Why is it off-topic? I want to know if it's grammatically correct.

    – user161005
    22 mins ago







  • 1





    It is off-topic because you have provided no research. The more work you put into a question, the better the answers you can expect to attract; likewise the less work, the poorer the answers. All “Is this grammatically correct?” questions are personal proofreading requests which will never help future visitors to our site for professional linguists and serious English-language enthusiasts. If you just need to run something past a native speaker for a proofread, that isn't a service we provide outside of our chatroom. Our sister site for English Language Learners may be of use but they too expect research.

    – tchrist
    7 mins ago












  • "Today weather" is a grammatically correct phrase but not as a substitute for "today's weather." In informal English, never formal English, "today" can be used as an adjective, but its meaning as an adjective isn't fitting with your usage. Rather, it means "of the present era" or "of the current times or trends" like when someone says, "That shirt is very today." dictionary.com/browse/today#

    – Benjamin Harman
    6 mins ago














-1












-1








-1








And if not, why? "Today weather" feels OK, but I want to be sure.










share|improve this question
















And if not, why? "Today weather" feels OK, but I want to be sure.







word-choice grammaticality






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 22 mins ago







user161005

















asked 31 mins ago









user161005user161005

1046




1046




put on hold as off-topic by tchrist 25 mins ago


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Please include the research you’ve done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – tchrist
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.







put on hold as off-topic by tchrist 25 mins ago


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Please include the research you’ve done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – tchrist
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.












  • @tchrist Why is it off-topic? I want to know if it's grammatically correct.

    – user161005
    22 mins ago







  • 1





    It is off-topic because you have provided no research. The more work you put into a question, the better the answers you can expect to attract; likewise the less work, the poorer the answers. All “Is this grammatically correct?” questions are personal proofreading requests which will never help future visitors to our site for professional linguists and serious English-language enthusiasts. If you just need to run something past a native speaker for a proofread, that isn't a service we provide outside of our chatroom. Our sister site for English Language Learners may be of use but they too expect research.

    – tchrist
    7 mins ago












  • "Today weather" is a grammatically correct phrase but not as a substitute for "today's weather." In informal English, never formal English, "today" can be used as an adjective, but its meaning as an adjective isn't fitting with your usage. Rather, it means "of the present era" or "of the current times or trends" like when someone says, "That shirt is very today." dictionary.com/browse/today#

    – Benjamin Harman
    6 mins ago


















  • @tchrist Why is it off-topic? I want to know if it's grammatically correct.

    – user161005
    22 mins ago







  • 1





    It is off-topic because you have provided no research. The more work you put into a question, the better the answers you can expect to attract; likewise the less work, the poorer the answers. All “Is this grammatically correct?” questions are personal proofreading requests which will never help future visitors to our site for professional linguists and serious English-language enthusiasts. If you just need to run something past a native speaker for a proofread, that isn't a service we provide outside of our chatroom. Our sister site for English Language Learners may be of use but they too expect research.

    – tchrist
    7 mins ago












  • "Today weather" is a grammatically correct phrase but not as a substitute for "today's weather." In informal English, never formal English, "today" can be used as an adjective, but its meaning as an adjective isn't fitting with your usage. Rather, it means "of the present era" or "of the current times or trends" like when someone says, "That shirt is very today." dictionary.com/browse/today#

    – Benjamin Harman
    6 mins ago

















@tchrist Why is it off-topic? I want to know if it's grammatically correct.

– user161005
22 mins ago






@tchrist Why is it off-topic? I want to know if it's grammatically correct.

– user161005
22 mins ago





1




1





It is off-topic because you have provided no research. The more work you put into a question, the better the answers you can expect to attract; likewise the less work, the poorer the answers. All “Is this grammatically correct?” questions are personal proofreading requests which will never help future visitors to our site for professional linguists and serious English-language enthusiasts. If you just need to run something past a native speaker for a proofread, that isn't a service we provide outside of our chatroom. Our sister site for English Language Learners may be of use but they too expect research.

– tchrist
7 mins ago






It is off-topic because you have provided no research. The more work you put into a question, the better the answers you can expect to attract; likewise the less work, the poorer the answers. All “Is this grammatically correct?” questions are personal proofreading requests which will never help future visitors to our site for professional linguists and serious English-language enthusiasts. If you just need to run something past a native speaker for a proofread, that isn't a service we provide outside of our chatroom. Our sister site for English Language Learners may be of use but they too expect research.

– tchrist
7 mins ago














"Today weather" is a grammatically correct phrase but not as a substitute for "today's weather." In informal English, never formal English, "today" can be used as an adjective, but its meaning as an adjective isn't fitting with your usage. Rather, it means "of the present era" or "of the current times or trends" like when someone says, "That shirt is very today." dictionary.com/browse/today#

– Benjamin Harman
6 mins ago






"Today weather" is a grammatically correct phrase but not as a substitute for "today's weather." In informal English, never formal English, "today" can be used as an adjective, but its meaning as an adjective isn't fitting with your usage. Rather, it means "of the present era" or "of the current times or trends" like when someone says, "That shirt is very today." dictionary.com/browse/today#

– Benjamin Harman
6 mins ago











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