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The phrase "it's getting hot" is grammatically correct and commonly used in written English.
You can use this phrase to describe a change in temperature or weather, as in "It's getting hot outside, so I suggest we go for a swim." It can also be used in a figurative sense to describe a situation becoming tense or intense, such as "The conversation was starting to get heated and I could sense it's getting hot." Another example could be "As the sun rose higher in the sky, it's getting hot in the tent and we had to open the windows for some fresh air."
Exact(29)
On the day the video premiered, a reviewer from Rap-Up wrote "It's getting hot in here," referencing Scherzinger's "smokin' body" and "steamy visuals".
It's getting hot out there.
"It's getting hot in here," he interjected.
"It's getting hot in those hollows".
It's getting hot in the kitchen.
4.30pm BST It's getting hot in North Carolina.
Similar(31)
Jessica Bridge of Ladbrokes said: "It's getting hotter by the day and punters are convinced the sunshine's here to stay all summer".
"It's getting hotter already," Marjorie said.
They say, 'No wonder it's getting hotter, that it's hard to find fish.' The young ones are worried about the future.
"As it's getting hotter at the lower altitudes, the lower plants are dying off, so it marches the coffee forest up the slopes". Jaramillo's research indicates that the borers are migrating with the coffee plants.
Especially now that it's getting hotter out.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com