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Words and phrases referred to as colloquial are only used in informal speaking and writing. These phrases are conversational in nature. A few examples of these phrases are, "raining cats and dogs," "old as the hills," and "more than one way to skin a cat."
Examples of cliches include "time will tell," "every cloud has a silver lining," and "actions speak louder than words." These are phrases or expressions that have been overused to the point of losing their originality or impact.
It was raining, raining, raining hard. It was falling on my head. It was falling on the stars. It was falling on my shoes. I got soaking wet I got soaking wet. But I stayed outside. I stayed outside. The rain was sweet. The rain was warm. The rain was soft It reminded me of home It was raining, raining, raining hard. It was falling, falling, falling on the stars It was raining, raining, raining hard. It was falling, falling, falling on the stars. Soft rain Raining, raining Sweet rain Raining, raining Warm rain Raining, raining Sweet soft Raining, raining Warm rain Raining, raining Sweet soft Raining, raining Warm rain Raining, raining
A conjunction is a word that connects words, phrases, or clauses in a sentence. It is used to show the relationship between the connected elements, such as addition, contrast, or causation. Examples of conjunctions include "and," "but," and "because."
Raining cats and dogs mean that it's raining very hard
If I do not take my umbrella, then its not raining. If it is not raining, then I won't take your umbrella.
yes, it was raining heavily.
Yesterday it rained.
yes, when it is raining, it rains.
Because before it was raining, water evaporated into clouds. When the clouds got too big it started raining.
About to rain, raining, just been raining.
Raining is a verb. Inside is a preposition.