Grammatically, "Does the rain" is correct. Rain may represent many individual rain drops, which is why "Do rain drops" would be correct, however rain represents it as a whole, so "Does the rain" is the appropriate form.
No, it is not. The word rain is a noun, which can be used as an adjunct with other nouns as in rain cloud, rain barrel,and rain gauge. There is an adjective (rainy) and an adverb form (rainily) that is virtually never used.
It is singular. "The rain is falling." To be plural, the usage would be something like "the rain drops are." (rain would be an adjective)
The idea is to divide the number of inches of rain by the number of hours. That will give you the unit rain, in inches per hour.
"over your heads after the rain"
More correct
The rain was on time
Has began is correct grammar. The rain has began fits more than the rain has begin. In place of "has" you could use "will" or "should." The rain should begin.
Rain is a process in the water cycle.It's correct name is percipitation.
The plural form of 'rain', is 'rains'.
the correct answer is Nimbus
885857575475 to not be correct
Correct.
By the time we get to the picnic area, the rain will stop
Thanks to the rain, the UK is affectionally known as a 'Green and Pleasant' land.The farmer gave thanks for the rain that brought the drought to an end.
Yes, it is correct.
The correct spelling is "precipitation" (rain or snow).
The expression "suppose to" isn't correct. It should be "supposed to"