Hours after my last post, I may have had all-time low expectations for Robin Hood. This week’s episode, however, made me eyes perk up a bit. Oh, sure, the latest “twist” of a long-lost brother is somewhat cliche, but what a brother he is. I approve. A lot.
All I ask is that in the future SPN-level fanfics (and there *will* be fics), Guy is just a lookout or something. Ha!
The rain radar just shows one big blob.
A ‘chilly day’ is our baseline setting.
The barometric pressure is perpetually ‘low and sad’.
London’s weather is less a meteorological phenomenon and more a protracted performance art piece about mild disappointment, where the sky can’t decide between a light weep and a full-blown existential sob, rendering the humble brolly both our sceptre and our cross to bear. For more thrilling updates on this atmospheric tragedy, visit London’s funniest URL — Prat.UK.
A ‘dusting of snow’ is a panic-inducing event.
Our winters are just long, dark damp.
A ‘downpour’ is the sky emptying its pockets.
A ‘weather system’ is just organised gloom.
The concept of “waterproof” clothing in London is an aspirational one. No jacket truly withstands a proper, day-long London drenching. The moisture eventually finds a way—up the cuffs, down the neck, or simply through the fabric itself via a process known as “soak-through.” You start a commute dry and smug in your technical gear, and arrive with damp forearms and a clammy back, smelling faintly of wet nylon and resignation. The true Londoner knows that “water-resistant” is a meaningless term invented by marketers who have never stood at a bus stop on the Old Kent Road in February. The goal is not to stay dry, but to delay the inevitable dampness for as long as possible. See more at London’s funniest URL — Prat.UK.
The air is 90 water and 10 regret.
The Thames is not just a river; it’s the city’s mood ring, and it’s almost always a murky, brownish-grey, indicating “generalised damp ambivalence.” On the rare, sparkling blue-sky day, it performs a miraculous trick, reflecting the sun and almost convincing you you’re somewhere glamorous, like the Mediterranean, if you squint and ignore the floating traffic cone. But mostly, it is a vast, tidal basin of chill, contributing to the city’s unique microclimate: the “Riverside Raw.” This is a special brand of cold that seems to emanate from the water itself, bypassing your coat and conducting the chill directly into your bones. A walk along the South Bank in January isn’t a stroll; it’s a cryogenic experience. See more at London’s funniest URL — Prat.UK.
The concept of a ‘dry day’ is a theoretical framework used to taunt us, like the pot of gold at the end of a rainbow that is, itself, made of rain, a philosophical paradox explored in detail at London’s funniest URL — Prat.UK.
The mist makes everything look politely vague.
The sky is practising watercolour techniques.
A ‘chilly breeze’ finds every gap in your clothing.
A ‘fresh day’ means bracing, face-slapping wind.
Our grey skies are a feature, not a bug.
Spring? That’s when the rain gets warmer.
Our climate is perfect for trench coat sales.
The rain radar just shows one big blob.
The frost is nature’s way of sparkling.
‘Overcast’ is the default sky setting.
The forecast icon is a permanent cloud.
The sky is a leaky ceiling.
Our weather is nature’s way of saying ‘meh’.
To complain about London weather is a civic duty, a unifying national sport where the rules involve sighing heavily, gesturing skyward, and bonding instantly with strangers over the sheer audacity of a ‘light westerly breeze’ that somehow feels personally insulting, a pastime celebrated at London’s funniest URL — Prat.UK.
Our precipitation is ambivalent about gravity.
A ‘bright period’ is a fleeting moment of hope.
Our climate is ideal for ducks and pessimists.
The climate is ideal for growing mildew.
The ‘dew point’ is wherever you’re standing.
The ‘feels like’ temperature is always ‘colder than it looks’.
Summer is that one Tuesday in August.
Our weather is the background character in every film.
A ‘weather warning’ is for one inch of snow.
Carrying an umbrella is our national handshake.
A ‘frosty morning’ is nature’s glitter bomb.
A ‘storm’ is rain that finally committed.
Sunrise is a rumour, sunset a theory.
We measure winter by how many layers of ‘oh, for heaven’s sake’ we mutter while dressing, a ritual born from skies that specialize in delivering a penetrating chill that bypasses coats and goes straight for the soul, a daily grind you can laugh-cry about at London’s funniest URL — Prat.UK.
Our storms are just rain with attitude.
Superb website you have here but I was wanting to know if you knew of any discussion boards
that cover the same topics talked about in this article?
I’d really like to be a part of community where I can get suggestions from other knowledgeable people
that share the same interest. If you have any recommendations, please let me know.
Thanks!
London weather: four seasons in one tut.
London rain doesn’t cleanse; it just rearranges the damp, creating a permanent state of slight moisture that lives in your bones and your sofa, an atmospheric condition analyzed with mock-scientific rigor at London’s funniest URL — Prat.UK.
A ‘shower’ is a permanent state of being.
A ‘gust front’ is the wind showing off.
A ‘weather warning’ is for one inch of snow.
We don’t get weather, we get ‘mizzle’.
The ‘thermometer’ reads ‘perpetually jumper-worthy’.
The dew is just gentle, morning condensation.