Want this question answered?
The Sunny Side was created in 1921.
all i know is that varsha doesnt love sunny...
Sunny - song - was created on 1966-08-25.
Shawn Colvin sang Sunny Came Home.
Depending on where you live, it could have been sunny today. In Tennessee where I live, it was sunny and close to degrees. For October, it was very nice out.
yes
I'm thinking real sunny out
Sunny today and cloudy tomorrow.
sunny a little bit of rain and all weekend might be a rainly but most of the time sunny with a high chance snow
Ozone is a gas produced by the sun's reaction with oxygen. Ozone alerts in cities come from a warm sunny day. Ozone is a natural occurring gas. A great example of how this is a natural process is the "hole" in the zone layer. This occurs when then sun can not hit the ozone layer and ozone startes to decay into oxygen. That is why we only see these "holes" near the poles and only during their winter months. The ozone layer is not connected to global warming. If the atmosphere beneath the ozone layer warms, the thermocline between the troposphere and the ozone layer weakens. This then allows more water vapor to enter the ozone layer, and reduce the amount of ozone found there at any given time.
It was nighttime around midnight so of course it won 't be sunny the moon will be out it will be dark .
Sunny is an adjective. We say: A sunny day. A sunny disposition. The sunny side of the street. The adverb 'sunnily' has rare but specific uses.
"Sunny" can be written as सन्नी in Hindi.
A lot of cloudy forcast, lots of rain and wind. Hail if you catch it on a weekend. Depends when you go really. Lots of snow in winter. But on things true, its never, and I mean NEVER sunny out there.
Sunny windless afternoons, days with low humidity, and slightly worse on weekdays, when traffic is high (and consequently high NOx and VOC emissions).
'Sunny' is an adjective. 'Yesterday was sunny, whereas today is cloudy.' 'My sister has a very sunny personality.' 'Sunny' cannot be used as a verb.
The "s" in sunny, is a sound, if you are referring to sunny as in " it's so sunny outside" or a name as in " Sunny and I went to the mall". It just makes a "ess" sound.