The homophone for "rained" is "reigned." "Rained" refers to precipitation falling from the sky, while "reigned" refers to ruling or being in power.
A homophone for "rained" is "reigned".
A homophone for "reigned" is "rained".
Homophones for rain include reign and rein. Rain: water from the clouds; The trees and grass needed some rain. Reign: to control or rule a nation; He will reign as king, one day. Rein: a horse strap; The rein broke and the horse took off.
The past tense verb for "it rained last night" is "rained."
The past tense for the verb "rain" is "rained".
A homophone for "rained" is "reigned".
A homophone for "reigned" is "rained".
rained
Homophones for rain include reign and rein. Rain: water from the clouds; The trees and grass needed some rain. Reign: to control or rule a nation; He will reign as king, one day. Rein: a horse strap; The rein broke and the horse took off.
The past tense of "rain" would be "rained".It rained is the past tense
That is the correct spelling of "raining" (having rain). The sound-alike word is "reigning" meaning serving as king, queen, or royal sovereign, or (metaphorically) being in control or authority.
The past tense verb for "it rained last night" is "rained."
it always rained
'It was a dreadful winter that year. It rained and rained and rained for two long months.'
'It rained like cats and dogs.'
The Day It Rained Forever was created in 2000.
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.