(il) pleut means "(it) is raining" in French.
Il pleut
quand il pleut
"It rains" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Il pleut. The pronunciation of the present indicative in the third person impersonal singular -- which famously references the opening line (Il pleure dans mon coeur comme il pleut sur la ville, "It cries in my heart like it rains over the city") of a poem by Paul-Marie Verlaine (March 30, 1844 - January 8, 1896) and which also translates as "It does rain, It is raining" -- will be "eel pluh" in French.
oui sa pleut
If you want to say it is raining, it is "Il pleut". If you want to say rain then it is pluie.
the rain = la pluie
Il pleut
"il fait pleut" is a literal translation of "it does rain", which would be "il pleut" in French.
In French, "it is raining" is expressed as "il pleut".
Il pleut
"What do you do when it's warm?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Que fais-tu quand il fait chaud? The question also translates as "What do you make when the weather is warm?" in English. The pronunciation will be "kuh feh-tyoo kaw-teel feh sho" in French.
quand il pleut
le ciel est couvert (the sky is cloudy, overcast) or le temps est pluvieux (the weather is rainy) are correct in French. 'le ciel est pluvieux' (the sky is rainy) is grammatically correct, but this is not something French people would say. "il pleut" means 'it's raining'.
"Ah! It's raining, and that upsets you!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Ah! Il pleut et cela te bouleverse! The declaration also translates as "Oh! It rains, and that moves you deeply!" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "ah eel pluh ey sla tuh bool-vers" in French.
it is raining is translated "il pleut" in French.
Il pleut
"It's rainy" in French is "Il pleut."