Well, it depends on what kind of fly you mean like, a horse fly a tiny fly a house fly, a horse fly is most likely to fly in the rain without dying or drowning
No, flies biting does not necessarily indicate that rain is coming. Fly behavior is not a reliable indicator of weather patterns. Changes in barometric pressure and other environmental factors are more closely linked to predicting rain.
The phrase "fly as thick as driving rain" from the poem "From a Railway Carriage" by Robert Louis Stevenson describes a large number of flies buzzing around rapidly and densely, much like rain falling heavily and persistently. It highlights the intense and chaotic motion of the flies as observed from the passing train.
The future tense of the verb "flies" is "fly," as in "he will fly," "she will fly," etc.
Fly -- I fly to work Flies -- She flies to work Flying -- We are flying to work
The Rain - Supa Dupa Fly - was created in 1996.
The Flies fly over fields of fruit. The Flying flies fly far. The Flipping flies fly fanatically The flies fly with flipping wings. the Fruit flies are fanatics for fruit fThe ruit flies fight Finland flies freakishly. That's all i can think of at the mo!! ohh it has to start with specifically THE FLY!! SOZ
no
No
yes an insect that can fly, are fly's. flies , dragon flies, specifically blue bottles
Horse flies fly using wings, just like any other kind of fly.
Yes the word flies is the plural noun of fly. Flies is also the present tense of the verb to fly.
I don't know what it means