The plural form of 'rain', is 'rains'.
The plural form for nimbus (grey rain cloud) is nimbi.
That is the spelling of the word rain(precipitation).Words with the same sound are :REIN - a line attached to a horse bridleREIGN - to rule, as a king or queen
Exactly like that. The word means, to take part in something, or to be involved in something.
The correct spelling is "precipitation" (rain and snow, or a chemical settling out).The similar word is perspiration (sweat).
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.
That is the correct spelling of the plural noun "rainforests" (all one word).
rain
No, that is not the correct spelling at all.The correct spelling is reindeer.The spelling of the singular and plural are the same.For example:The reindeer watched the cat walk past him.There is a group of reindeer over there.
The plural form for nimbus (grey rain cloud) is nimbi.
The correct spelling is "precipitation" (rain or snow).
Phenomena is the correct plural for all senses except when "phenomenon" is used to mean a prodigy or person of exceptional abilities, in which case "phenomenons" is correct. For example Rain and snow are natural phenomena, but Tiger Woods is considered one of the phenomenons of golf.
The correct spelling is "precipitation" (rain, snow, sleet).
Grammatically, "Does the rain" is correct. Rain may represent many individual rain drops, which is why "Do rain drops" would be correct, however rain represents it as a whole, so "Does the rain" is the appropriate form.
That is the spelling of the word rain(precipitation).Words with the same sound are :REIN - a line attached to a horse bridleREIGN - to rule, as a king or queen
Weather, as in rain, while it is whether, as in whether or not.
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.
This is likely the adjective "torrential" (in a torrent, e.g. heavy rain).