Sorry, no. How about: I'm hoping it rains soon.
If you go outside when it rains you better take an umbrella.
It RAINS for the whole weekend so the fish were safe for another week is not grammatically correct. Rains is present tense; were safe is past tense.Correct: It rained for the whole weekend so the fish were safe for another week.
Yes, "it is raining" is the correct way to describe current precipitation.
i need a the word cover used as a verb in a sentence
The statement, 'i am afraid of the rains' could be perfectly correct, if the "i" were capitalized. However, this does not mean quite the same thing as the more common statement, 'I am afraid of the rain'. In the first statement, "rains" means "instances of rainfall". For example, "In most summers, northern Germany has frequent rains. Therefore, when I travel to Germany in summer, I always carry a large umbrella, because I am afraid of the rains."
They put the corral for the animals to sleep when it rains
When it rains outside i get a gloomy feeling........................................... Just kidding.
Rains is a verb, the third person singular conjugation of rain. "It rains every afternoon."Rains can also be a plural noun, the rains, which indicates heavy rainfall or the season of heavy rainfall.
The plural form of 'rain', is 'rains'.
Frogs like to croak after it rains.
Yes, but they can be rewritten. The conditional statement "If it rains then I will get wet" can be written as "I will get wet if it rains" so that the sentence does not begin with if. In logic, these conditional sentences are also equivalents to "I will not get wet or it rains", which does not contain the word "if".
Example sentence - The endless rains would cause the burnt hillside to erode.