It rained all day.
It always rains in June.
It is raining cats and dogs.
It has rained all day.
It had rained all week but we were not deterred.
There will be rain overnight.
It is going to rain tomorrow.
Enemy bullets rained down on the troop.
They attacked the man, raining blows on his head and shoulders.
as a noun: Will you please check the amount of rain on our rain gauge? as a verb: I could not gauge his understanding by the look on his face. (as a verb, gauge means to evaluate, estimate, judge, or measure)
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."
use an alive verb
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.
The noun 'rain' is a common, mass (uncountable) concrete noun, a word for moisture condensed from the atmosphere that falls in droplets; a word for a thing.Note: The plural noun 'rains' is a word specifically for a period of or the season of heavy rainfall.The word 'rain' is also a verb: rain, rains, raining, rained.
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.
The word "rain" is a verb in its base form.
Depending on context, Rain can be an intransitive verb or transitive verb.
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.
There is no pronoun in 'drink the rain'. The word 'drink' is a verb; 'the' is an article; 'rain' is a noun.
Rain is usually a noun, but can be a verb, as It's starting to rain.
as a noun: Will you please check the amount of rain on our rain gauge? as a verb: I could not gauge his understanding by the look on his face. (as a verb, gauge means to evaluate, estimate, judge, or measure)
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."
Yes, the word 'rains' is both a verb and a noun. The verb form is the third person, singular, present of the verb 'to rain'. The noun form is the plural form of the noun 'rain'. The plural noun, 'rains', is a word for the time period characterized by frequent or intense rain, the rainy season.
use an alive verb
The word there'll is a contraction, a shortened form of the pronoun 'there' and the verb (or auxiliary verb) 'will', used to express the future tense of a main verb.The contraction functions as the subject and verb (or auxiliary verb) of a sentence or a clause.Note: The word "there" is a pronoun only when it introduces a sentence or a clause. The word "there" also functions as an interjection, an adverb, and a noun. The noun "there" is a word for a place.Examples:There will be rain this afternoon.ORThere'll be rain this afternoon.I wonder if there will be practice today.ORI wonder if there'll be practice today.
The word using is a verb. It is the present participle of the verb use.