The water level goes up when it rains, and also air temperature in clouds.
In effect, "heat went up when rain came down", because water vapor in clouds had to condense into drops. That released heat energy into the clouds. The air temperature in clouds must go up when rain condenses out.
Water in the soil or in lakes will eventually evaporate (perhaps through leaves). That evaporation absorbs heat from the soil, lakes and vegetation. Rising water vapor returns the heat to the clouds. The water vapor could not rise if prior rain had not "made room for it".
So in effect, "rain (plus evaporation and rising water vapor) transferred heat up".
The rain goes down into the soil but after meanwhile the water evaporates into the atmosphere
Umbrella
Air molecules. Sometimes enough air goes up to produce a significant up-draft ... and that can result in a real thunder-storm.also i think after that day the rain go up and go into the clouds. That is what i say the answer is to:[ What Goes Up When The Rain Comes Down]
What goes up when rain comes down is an umbrella.
rain goes down, but never goes up actually it evaporates is transformed to water vapor goes into the clouds and eventually comes down as rain again (pixilated)
Heat goes up when rain comes down. This is a kid joke.
rain
rain get clean when it goes up into the air by evaporation all the dirt and grime goes back down and cant get to the top of a rain cloud
to the river
aliens do first they throw up green acid and it goes down to earth and that is acid rain
The song of storms goes like this: A, down, up, A, down, up. This song allows you to bring rain in.
The rain is picking up pollen out of the air and it's feeding the algae. Shock it and double up on the chlorine after a rain. At least until the pollen count goes down.