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How to describe a sunny day in a story

Describe a sunny day in your own words. How would you describe a sunny day. Description of a sunny day.

See also By describing where the events are about to take place, you can transport your reader into another world. Make use of the five senses – sight, hearing, smell, touch and taste – to evoke the atmosphere of the setting. The following will give you some examples of how you can describe using time as the main element. The same place can look
and feel very different at different times of the day. Take a park, for example.
At daybreak, it is cool and invigorating, full of songbirds, walkers and joggers. At midday, it is sleepy, hot and still. In the evening, shadows lengthen and coolness returns.
But at night, it can be a frightening place, with dangers lurking in the dark shadows of the foliage. Morning The day dawned crisp and clear. The sun poured through my window. Another day had dawned, bringing with it new hopes and aspirations. The light of dawn seeped into my room. I rubbed my bleary eyes and walked to the window. There was
a pearly glow in the sky. The first rays of sunlight lit up my room. The dawn chorus of melodic birdsong drifted in. The rising sun cast a rosy hue across the morning sky. Golden fingers of sunlight lit up the scene. The just-risen sun shone softly on the city streets, bringing with it a flurry of early-morning activity. Dappled sun shone through the trees,
creating mysterious shadows.

The blue sky was dotted with fluffy white clouds that drifted lazily in the gentle breeze. The blazing midday sun shone relentlessly on the hikers. The roads shimmered in the heat of the midday sun. The sunlit skyscrapers pierced the hot, blue sky. The afternoon sun bathed the buildings in its warm light. Tiny specks of dust seemed to dance in the
shaft of afternoon sunlight that slanted through the window. The evening sun cast long shadows on the ground.
The slanting rays of the setting sun gave a warm orange tinge to the sky. The sky was ablaze with the fire of the setting sun. The night sky was aglow with bright city lights. The pale crescent moon shone like a silvery claw in the night sky. We looked up at the blanket of stars that stretched to infinity.
The occasional barking of faraway dogs broke the silence of the night. For over 15 years, Augustine’s English Classes has helped hundreds of students fall in love with the subject and excelling in school exams. If you are interested to know how our classes work, or what our secret winning formula is, do feel free to drop us a message or give us a call.
As I write this article, it’s raining. Through my window, I see the outline of trees dancing in the wind.

The occasional car rolls by, momentarily illuminating the slick road before the world returns to darkness.
I don’t think I’ll be going for a run today. In my opinion, weather is one of the most interesting elements of fiction.

A big storm or a sunny day can add symbolic meaning to one’s work. Furthermore, weather can underscore a feeling or mirror a dramatic conflict. Weather is powerful, and today we’re going to examine a few ways to use it.

Contents: Just like baseball games have rain-outs, stories have weather conditions that affect the outcome of events. For an example from a classic, look no further than J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Fellowship of the Ring. As the Fellowship sets out on their journey to Mt. Doom, they decide to take a treacherous pass through the Misty Mountains. A fine plan…
if only the weather co-operated. Instead, they encounter a snowstorm, falling rocks, and eerie noises on the wind. These harsh conditions force them to turn back and reroute their path through the Mines of Moria. That’s where they run into the Balrog, and where (spoiler) Gandalf falls to his doom. So, as we can see, weather can complicate a hero’s
journey or even alter its course. It’s uniquely suited to do so because fighting weather is nearly impossible, even in a fantasy world like Tolkien’s. If you need a complicating factor, you’ll find few more effective. Free story time! Well, at least a few sentences of a story. Let’s start off like this… Luna admired the twinkling sunlight peeking through the
trees. The air surrounding her was mild and comforting, like floating in a warm bath. If I’ve done my job right, you should feel relaxed. That’s the power of weather: in just two sentences, we can establish a distinct mood in our writing. Now, let’s examine the other end of the spectrum… Luna peered at the sparse moonlight creeping through the trees.
The wind wailed mournfully and set her shivering in an instant.
All that’s changed here is the weather, yet the mood is totally different.
I don’t know about you, but I always feel better when it’s sunny outside.
Likewise, readers will end up with a particular feeling based on the weather of your story. If you want readers to feel happy, describe a sunny day. If you want them to feel apprehensive, describe a stormy evening. Speaking of which… Ever notice how many descriptions of weather can double as those of humans? That’s because weather and human
emotion often overlap. A few examples: Murph stormed into the store. “I want more ice cream,” the little girl thundered. His sunny optimism lit up the room. Human emotion and weather are interconnected, even within the foundation of our language itself. As such, weather is an excellent tool for symbolizing emotion, and more. William
Shakespeare’s King Lear, for example, is one of the earliest examples of weather in fiction. When Lear wanders out into the wilds, a storm rolls in. The storm helps create a mood, yes. But it also goes deeper than that. In this scene, Lear discusses his life with his Fool. He’s trying his best to understand the world around him and make sense of what’s
happening with his kingdom and his daughters. Simultaneously, back in his castle things are going to hell. Here, the chaos of the storm mirrors the chaos of the story. The weather symbolizes the wildness of the moment. It’s no coincidence that the storm dies down just as order is restored. In your next book, consider underscoring a dramatic moment
with symbolic weather.
If the climax has an uncertain outcome, it will almost certainly be made more suspenseful by a storm. If your story has a happy ending, a sunny day can symbolize that fact nicely. Or, if you want to leave your readers with a feeling of uncertainty, you might change your weather to overcast, with a chance of rain. We’ve covered three ways to use
weather in fiction. So why limit ourselves to just one per story? Why not use them all? That’s what Neil Gaiman does in A Game of You, the fifth collected volume of his masterful Sandman comic book series. The story’s main character is a woman named Barbie (yes, like Barbie and Ken), who used to dream of being the princess of a fantasy realm
when she was young.
When we meet her, however, she doesn’t dream at all. Barbie must descend back into her dreams to confront her own childhood (with the help of the titular Sandman, of course). In the book’s final act, a hurricane descends upon New York City. The weather fulfills all three of our functions. The hurricane is a complicating factor.
Barbie’s friends are trying to buy her enough time to delve into her dreams and confront her past. However, when the hurricane threatens her safety, they must save her from the weather. One of Barbie’s friends, Wanda, even dies in the attempt. The hurricane sets a clear mood: our story is in chaos and no one is safe. As the tension builds, the storm
also builds in intensity, which heightens the emotions we’re already feeling.
The hurricane symbolizes Barbie’s inner turmoil. At its core, bad weather is an internal struggle. The earth provides us shelter, yet also destroys that shelter when natural disasters strike. The external weather symbolically mirrors the internal struggle of the main character. While the storm rages outside, Barbie battles her own past within her
dreams.
It’s symbolism like this that heightens an already exciting dramatic moment. Though we don’t always consider it, weather is one of the most powerful tools in the writer’s toolbox. This is just about the only opportunity we’ll ever have to control the weather. So I say we should use it! You can use ProWritingAid to improve your weather descriptions to
set the mood in your novel.
Use our Sensory Report to highlight which of the five senses you've used in a scene, then mix it up! Add some sound and taste descriptions to your weather. Struggling to describe the weather in a poignant way? Try out our Paraphrase button to rewrite your sentence. The sun is one of the most common contextual features of a setting that we write
about. But it’s hard to come up with creative new ways to talk about something that has been discussed in countless books over Millenia. Below, I’ve compiled some creative sun metaphors that can help you break through that writer’s block and find the perfect setting description in your story. After exploring metaphors for the sun, I’ll also provide
some further adjectives and color descriptions that can help add flair to your writing, and create the perfect image in your reader’s mind. You can picture in your mind sunrays on your hand and, with your fingers outstretched, some of them passing through the gaps in your fingers to lay on the ground below. To say it slipped through your fingers is
metaphorical because it didn’t literally slip through anything. It didn’t slide or bounce or refract off your fingers at all. In fact, the it is a long, long way away.
Rather, it’s the sunrays that pass between the fingers. But we can be much more creative and visual in our description than to say “the sun rays passed between my fingers” – so we say “it slipped through”. This is an example of personification of the sun. In this metaphor, the sun isn’t a friend but a tormentor. An example of a time when it might mock
a protagonist is when they’re out on a hike through the desert. The protagonist is exhausted and dehydrated, with a long way to walk in the heat of the day. Here, we might imagine the protagonist being along and feeling as if the sun is their only company. But the heat means it isn’t a friend but an enemy, mocking you as you try to escape its heat.
Related: A List of Summer Metaphors, Similes and Idioms We use this metaphor for the moon as well. Imagine the clouds obscuring the sun’s view, but as the clouds part, it seems like it “peeks out” at you to take a look. This is another example of personification. Of course, an object without personality or a brain can’t take a peek at anything. But this
personification helps us to create an image in our minds. This metaphor can be used at the end of a storm to show the end of the storm and the return to better weather. When I took college classes in creative writing, my professor shared a book he wrote, and it opened with the line: “the sun flipped a golden coin”. I’ve always remembered it and
banked this in my mind as a great way to start a story. Others have had their own adaptations of this, such as calling the sun a golden orb or medallion in the sky (See Also: Sky Metaphors). Here again we have personification. Of course an inanimate object can’t chase anything or anyone! But what is happening here is the description of the changes
in the weather as a battle between different elements. The clouds are being chased like a sheepdog chases sheep, to return to its rightful position as the top dog in the skies. We can imagine the sun being the ruler over us.
It sits so far overhead and is visible from just about anywhere you are (so long as you’re outside). It almost feels like it’s watching us constantly, standing guard.
Again, this is of course personification – it doesn’t really do any watching at all! If we were to consider it to be like a god, we can imagine it’s watching us and passing judgement on us all day long. This one is another more positive, upbeat metaphor. The idea that you are being smiled at from above gives you a sense that you’re blessed and cared for
throughout your day.
This might be a metaphor you use if you feel as if you’ve had a lucky day or got some good news today. You can’t imagine using this metaphor when you’re going through hardship or feeling the punishing heat of rays on your skin. This metaphor calls the sun an egg! It may sound absurd, but if you look at it, it looks like a yolk from the inside of an egg.
You might write “the yolk of the sun” as a metaphor to describe it, for example. This is your classic straight-up metaphor where you are directly calling one thing something else.
This is a metaphor you might want to use if you’re writing a story from a religious perspective. To wake to “God’s morning star” is to see God in nature – be it a Christian, Muslim or Buddhist God, or even simply a pantheist. It might be seen as a moment to reflect on God, the beauty of the world, or even a moment for quiet prayer before eating. The
character might be waking feeling blessed, or even, feeling as if they’re downtrodden but continue to sustain their faith in their religion. The sun is quite literally a star, so this is borderline figurative or literal (also depending on you believe in God!).
Related: A List of 19 Light Metaphors I love this metaphor. I can imagine someone pulling open the curtains and feeling joyful about their day ahead. When the curtains open, the sun is revealed – shining big and bright right back at the protagonist. The sun is a symbol of the person’s mood and greets or “welcomes” you to a day you’re looking
forward.
Here, it is being personified, which means you’re giving human features to non-human things. This is a description you might use at the end of the day as night falls.
Here, we can imagine the sun and moon taking shifts (there’s another metaphor for you!). They swap each 12 hours, almost like they’re in an unending battle. Here, the sun is the loser, succumbing to the moon (or night), to “retreat” through night. This is a metaphor to explain the coming of the night. Just as we go to bed, we can also imagine that
orb in the sky going to sleep for the night. We shape the patterns of our lives around the night and day, so it makes sense for us to project some of our behaviors back onto the sun itself. This, again, is a form of personification where it’s being given the trait of an animal or human – the idea of going to bed! Read Also: A List of Nature Idioms and
Nature Metaphors Yellow – This is probably the most common color that comes to mind. On a clear day in the middle of the day, we’d expect its color to be yellow.Amber – This is the color you might expect to see during dusk or early in the morning.Copper – We’ll often use “copper” as an adjective in creative descriptions, such as “the scorching
copper sun”.Honeycomb – This is the color you might experience in a certain ambiance, such as in a forest where the rays slip through the leaves and spot the forest surface with honeycomb colors and patterns.Golden – Like Amber, we might use this descriptive color when the atmosphere is thick at dawn or dusk. Blazing – A term you might use on a
particularly hot day.Flaming – Similar to blazing – for hot days.Glowing – A good term for sunrise or sunset when there is a golden color in the air.Shining – A good term for the middle of the day.Scorching – Another one for hot days.Scolding – Again, this adjective describes the heat of the day.Licking – When you can feel rays dancing on your
skin.Tickling – Similar to licking. Sun metaphors can help enhance your writing and make it more descriptive. Aim to create an image in your reader’s mind by using adjectives and colors that match the mood you are trying to set. You can use different metaphors or idioms for different times of day or moods of your protagonists. Other metaphors you
can use in your writing to enrich it include happiness metaphors and fear metaphors. I’m Chris and I run this website – a resource about symbolism, metaphors, idioms, and a whole lot more! Thanks for dropping by.

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