No, it is an idiom because you can't tell what it means by trying to define it literally. Hyperbole is exaggeration - an example would be "It was raining so much we had to row a boat to work."
Yes, the statement "it was raining cats and dogs" is a hyperbole because it exaggerates the intensity of the rain by comparing it to something absurd (cats and dogs falling from the sky). Additionally, the promise of "more of the same" for the next day reinforces the hyperbolic nature of the statement.
The phrase "it's raining cats and dogs!" is hyperbole.
Its raining cats and dogs!
No, hyperbole is an exaggeration. "Raining hard enough to wash the town away" would be hyperbole. "Raining cats and dogs" is an idiom because it makes no sense when you translate it literally.
No! 'its raining cats and dogs' is an Idiom.
No, A Simile uses AS (or like) to make a comparison. For example, "It was raining as much as it did in Noah's time."
"It's raining cats and dogs" is an idiom.
Raining cats and dogs mean that it's raining very hard
There is an expression - "raining cats and dogs". This does not mean that cats and/or dogs are literally falling from the sky, it simply means that it is raining very hard.
under what headword would you find the idiom raining cats and dogs?
It is raining heavily
In olden times people threw rubbish into the street. In amongst the rubbish would be cats and dogs which would be washed along the street during heavy rain. Hence raining cats and dogs. Of course, they are not literally raining from above!
Its raining cats and dogs