If you go outside when it rains you better take an umbrella.
how to use inexplicable in three sentence's
This is a sentence. A prisoner has to serve the sentence the judge gives him.
If you said "use coincidence in a sentence" you already know how to use it in a sentence and are probably getting examples. if you said" how do you use coincidence in a sentence" you most-likely don't know the definition of it.
This sentence is about nothing.
you just used it in a sentence
They put the corral for the animals to sleep when it rains
Frogs like to croak after it rains.
I remember the effects of last year's torrential rains.
The heavy rains caused a mudflow. The mudflow came down the hill and hit the village.
Sorry, no. How about: I'm hoping it rains soon.
'If' can be used in a sentence as it is used in this one: "If you want, we can go to the movie.". If is often used at the beginning of a conditional sentence. If it rains, I will wear a hat. If you are busy I will come back later. If you are having lunch I will call back later.
Runoff from the field sprayed with herbicides polluted the river. The heavy rains caused runoff that eroded the hill. We planted trees on the hillside so runoff from heavy rains would not cause erosion.
i need a the word cover used as a verb in a sentence
When it rains outside i get a gloomy feeling........................................... Just kidding.
Rains is a verb, the third person singular conjugation of rain. "It rains every afternoon."Rains can also be a plural noun, the rains, which indicates heavy rainfall or the season of heavy rainfall.
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)
The subordinate clause is "when it rains," as it cannot stand alone as a complete sentence and is dependent on the main clause for its meaning.