Want this question answered?
Yes, heavy rains can cause erosion in a desert.
The past tense of "rain" would be "rained".It rained is the past tense
If it received more than 10 inches (250 mm) of rainfall per year, on average, it would no longer be considered a desert.
that would be helpful
The Nile River floods annually, bringing fresh fertilizer to the crops. The floods can not be controlled and would occasionally destroy crops, drown homes, and or overflow the banks to heavily.
we would all burn up!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Since the rain occurred over some period of time, you would use the imperfect tense here, and it would be the impassive form. "Se llovió" would be "it rained", or perhaps "it was raining", or even "it used to rain" depending on context."
you will stay sick and get sicker
Astronomers could predict when the nile river would flood because they studied the stars and they saw that at the time that the stars got to a certain point that the nile river would flood at that time
the plants would be effected because #1 there burned or#2 they are dying from the loss of shade from the trees being burned. some plants adapt to fires and become immune or they have natural oils that prevent the fire
That's the way God destroyed the earth, besides Noah and his family, with two of every animal. And Jesus did fast for the same amount of time, and the Jews wandered for forty years in the desert during the Exodus from Egypt.
On every day in February 2011 it would have rained somewhere in the world. So the answer is that it rained on 28 days in February 2011.