There have been tales of frogs, shells, snails, fish and even starfish falling.
This often happens because a violent storm forms over areas where there are shallower waters, such as lagoons, creeks and ponds, causing updraughts. These updraughts take small, light creatures from shallower waters into the atmosphere, then travel a little distance (maybe up to many kilometres inland), dumping them somewhere else later.
Well snails and slugs come out in the rain but i dont know any others.
They usually seek shelter where ever they can. In some cases the animal may stand out in the rain as it feels just as good to them as it does to us.
Animals that likes to get wet.
Mosquitoes
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.
The expression 'raining cats and dogs' means that it is raining really hard, so people figured that if animals were coming from the sky they would be coming down really hard too.
Zero
No
The phrase "raining cats and dogs" is just an expression used to describe heavy rain, it doesn't actually mean that animals are falling from the sky. It may have originated from the idea of animals seeking shelter on rooftops during heavy rain, giving the illusion of them falling from the sky.
According to Mythology, when it is raining it is the clouds that are crying.
Brown ha ha
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.
If it were, wouldn't it be constantly raining slop?
the sky never did fall and it never will the sky can not fall. it is impossible! they sky is made up of gasses. gass can not fall. so do not worry about the sky falling. it is just a myth.
when its been raining for a while and then the sun comes out.
cloudy with a chance of meatballs