Residents living on the East Coast can look forward to another week of unseasonably high temperatures as the warming trend is predicted to continue through the weekend.

Just like in November -- which is marked as one of the warmest months on record -- December has begun with extremely mild temperatures and no expectation of snow in sight.

According to Accuweather, those on the Northern East Coast will enjoy another dry and mostly sunny week while temperatures will average between 5 and 10 degrees above average.

"The pattern won't just be mild this week, but getting progressively milder into the weekend," said AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Joe Lundberg.

Tuesday will see high temperatures right around normal, which will make it the coolest day this week along the Interstate-95 corridor from Washington, D.C. to Boston. However, a jet stream will cause temperatures to warm up just in time for the weekend.

As a result, the high temperatures could break, or at least challenge, records across a large portion of the East this weekend including New York City, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., Indianapolis, Detroit, Louisville and Nashville.

"The mild air will peak this weekend, allowing for some record-high temperatures to be challenged," AccuWeather Meteorologist Evan Duffey said.

Meanwhile, temperatures will peak about 10 and 30 degrees above normal this weekend from the Midwest to the Northeast and interior South. This means that the weather will feel more like the middle of October rather than the second full week of December.

"To put into perspective how mild it will be, overnight low temperatures will be higher than the average daytime high temperature for this time of year," AccuWeather Meteorologist Michael Doll said.

A storm system is expected to follow the warm weekend, bring drenching rain on Sunday into next Monday. Cooler air will also return across the Eastern states early next week, though the temperature will remain relatively mild.

Significant snowfall across the eastern U.S. is not forecast to occur until after the New Year thanks to El Niño.