Rain => Vrohi (pronounced VRO-HE) => βροχή
It came from the Greek word floodus mictaliass which means giant rain
The scientific name for a person who loves rain is "pluviophile." This term is derived from the Latin word "pluvial," which means rain, and the Greek word "phile," which means lover.
βροχη [vrohi]
Zeus was lord of the sky, and of the rain.
'Nimbus' means rain. The Greeks and Romans collected rainwater in an 'Impluvium', situated in the main room of the house/villa.
Mvua is the Kikuyu word for the English word rain.
The word "hail" (frozen rain) together with its German and Dutch relative "hagel", comes from the prehistoric West Germanic word "hagalaz", which is related to the Greek word "kákhlēx", which means... "pebble".
The Latin word for 'rain' is pluvia. It's a feminine gender noun. A related word in Latin is the adjective 'pluvialis', which means 'bringing rain, growing after rain, or relating to rain'. Another related word is the adjective 'pluvius', which means 'of rain, rain-bringing, or rainy'.
The Latin word for 'rain' is pluvia. It's a feminine gender noun. A related word in Latin is the adjective 'pluvialis', which means 'bringing rain, growing after rain, or relating to rain'. Another related word is the adjective 'pluvius', which means 'of rain, rain-bringing, or rainy'.
Ame. (A-may) is the Japanese word for rain.
The word rain has one syllable.