how about it,
The weather is going to rain. 'The weather is' should be followed by an adjective. E.g. 'The weather is good'; The weather is bad'; 'The weather is cloudy'; 'The weather is sunny'. In this case, if you want to say it is going to rain later, it may be best to use one of the following phrases: 'It is going to rain later' or 'It looks like it will rain later' or 'Rain is forecast for later today.' (referencing a 'weather forecast'', a media announcement for what weather to expect).I suggest don't forget to bring your umbrella. Because you are telling someone not to forget, what are you doing is 'reminding' them. I have corrected this sentence below.
~~~
I would write this like so:
It is going to rain later. So I would remind you not to forget your umbrella.
or
It is going to rain later. Don't forget to bring your umbrella. (if bring is the appropriate verb: see my notes below). ~~~ There is no need to write 'I suggest'.
or
It is going to rain later. So don't forget your umbrella.
~~~
In this context, 'take' and 'bring' would not be the same.
'Take your umbrella with you'. - This suggests the speaker may not join the person. A dad could say this to his child leaving the house.
'Bring your umbrella with you'. - This suggests the speaker joins the person. A friend could say this on the phone to his friend he is meeting for coffee later in the afternoon. He is saying, 'Bring your umbrella with you when you come to meet me.'
'Take the money'. This could be said if I am giving you money. Or, if you are going to the Bank on your own and I say 'Take the money with you' (I am not going with you to the Bank).
'Bring the money'. This could be said if you owe me money, and I am telling you 'Bring the money when you come to meet me.' Or, if I am waiting for you in my car because we are going to the Bank, and I say, 'Bring the money' as in 'Bring the money outside with you when you join me in the car'.
So it depends.
how about it,
The weather is going to rain. i suggest that you to don't forget should bring take your umbrellaI just think it is more fluent:) Maybe yours is better than mine:)
BTW it is really Nice weather here In my country.
Susan
It's going to rain. i suggest you don't forget to bring your umbrella.
The feeling of 'bring' in this sentence is that the person is meeting you somewhere so they are 'bringing' their umbrella to you. If you were not going with them then it would be 'take'.
how about it,
The weather is going to rain It will be raining. i I suggest to don't forget that you bring your umbrella"The weather" can't be combined with "is" in this sentence so I recommend using "It will be raining" because this will sound more fluently.
"i" is always written as a capital letter "I".
"to don't forget" is a double denial which means "remember" so that should be replaced...
But you used "suggest" and if you couple that with "remember" you'll get a very odd sentence that isn't considerd proper English.
how about it,
The weather it is going to rain. i suggest to don't forget bring your umbrella.


