The predicate is "pours."
pours Rain.
"Heavy rain pours" typically means that there is a substantial amount of rain falling quickly. It implies intense rainfall and potentially adverse weather conditions associated with it.
One roars with pain and the other pours with rain.
They can drown...as they tend to look up to see what is hitting them and water pours into their nostrils.
Nope. It doesn't make itself, it freezes in the air
Subjects are the main noun of the sentence. Predicates, or verbs, tell what the subject is doing.
Maybe some Hurricanes, heavy down pours of rain, and landfalls even.
You can have two simple subjects and two simple predicates.
told
Yes, a sentence can have two complete predicates, for example:I washed the dishes and mopped the floor.
No - when it rains it pours (note spelling)
Gargoyles are grotesque sculptured stone heads. They are put on building to decorate the outlets from where rain water pours off the building's roofs.