rain
rains
rained
raining
Rains is the third person singular form of rain
Depending on context, Rain can be an intransitive verb or transitive verb.
rain would need a suffix if it was to be a verb. Rain is a noun by itself.
The word "rain" is a verb in its base form.
The past tense for the verb "rain" is "rained".
The word "rain" can be a noun or a verb. For example, in the sentence, "I like rain." it is a noun. In the sentence "It is going to rain." it is used as a verb.
Yes, the word "rain" is used as a verb, as in, "Today it will rain."It is also a noun, as in "The spring rain watered the flowers."
"Drizzle" can be a noun or a verb. As a noun, it describes a light rain, and as a verb, it means to rain lightly.
Walked is the verb in the sentence, "Damien and Gavin walked to school in the rain."
The word 'rain' functions as both a noun and a verb. Examples:As a noun: The rain made large puddles in the road.As a verb: It will rain today so please remember your umbrella.
Rain is usually a noun, but can be a verb, as It's starting to rain.
rain rains rained raining Rains is the third person singular form of rain
the rain: la pluie to rain: pleuvoir it's raining: il pleut