Water molecules naturally adhere to other water molecules. As water vapor condenses in the air, the molecules collect into droplets until they are heavy enough to begin falling. Depending on the various weather conditions, these droplets can connect to other droplets before they reach the ground, thereby forming larger and larger drops, or they could evaporate before they reach the ground, returning to the gaseous state in the air.
When it snows and rains at the same time, it typically means that the temperature is near freezing. The snowflakes melt as they fall through the layer of warm air, turning into raindrops. If the temperature drops again before reaching the ground, the raindrops may freeze upon contact, leading to freezing rain.
A counterexample for "when it rains it pours" could be a situation where it rains lightly throughout the day without escalating into a heavy downpour. This would go against the idea that once it starts raining, it will intensify significantly.
Yes, it is typically humid when it rains because rain is often associated with moisture in the air.
A puddle is a small body of water on the ground after it rains.
The Rains of Ranchipur was created on 1955-12-14.
because it does
A lot
Rain Drops....(Water)
it rains then the temperature drops below 32 degrees and it freezes
It rains meatballs and gum drops. Also spaghetti monsoons?
If it happens in a cloud, the drops combine until too heavy, and it rains.
It rains because when water is absorbed into clouds, the rain drops get too heavy and they fall to earth. Rain is good for the growth of crops.
Water that is already on the ground evaporates into the sky and creates clouds, then the clouds release water in little drops and that's how it rains
The plural noun is 'rains', an uncountable noun as a word specifically for seasons or periods of rain.The noun 'rain' is a singular, uncountable (mass) noun as a word for water drops falling from clouds.The word 'rain' is also a verb: rain, rains, raining, rained.
No, the word 'rains' is a verb and a noun.The verb 'rains' is the third person, singular, present of the verb to rain, meaning to fall in drops from the clouds; to pour down; to give abundantly; a word for an action.The noun 'rains' is the plural form of the singular noun rain (an uncountable plural noun) as a word for the regional season of heavy precipitation.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. Examples:It always rains on the day I wash my car. (verb)The annual rains will come soon. They start this time of year. (noun; the pronoun 'they' takes the place of the noun 'rains' in the second sentence)
Actually they do fall to the earth. Clouds are drops of water and when it rains, snow, hails, or if there is any sleet it is cloud falling through the ground.
Yes, the word 'rain' is a noun, a common, concrete noun; a word for water that falls in drops from clouds in the sky; a word for a thing.The noun 'rain' is a singular, uncountable (mass) noun as a word for water drops falling from clouds.The plural noun 'rains' is a plural, uncountable noun as a word for types of rain for seasons or regions.The word 'rain' is also a verb: rain, rains, raining, rained.