They were excited when it rained because it brought much-needed relief from the heat, watered crops, and replenished water sources.
The phrase "you are so excited that you looped" suggests that someone is extremely thrilled or overjoyed about something to the point where they are repeating their excitement or actions in a continuous loop, not able to contain their happiness.
yes they can
You can say either "excited to" or "excited about" an upcoming event, as both are commonly used and grammatically correct. It just depends on your personal preference.
Alkali metals tend to react quite violently with water, so if it rained any structure built out of them would be destroyed.
When the electrons are at higher energy level,they are said to be excited state.
A homophone for "rained" is "reigned".
So Excited was created on 2006-08-28.
why leeuwenhoek was so excited about what he saw
It rained so hard we were sodden in a minute
The past tense of "rain" would be "rained".It rained is the past tense
Rained is the past tense verb in "It rained last night."
EXCITED!
it always rained
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'It was a dreadful winter that year. It rained and rained and rained for two long months.'
A homophone for "reigned" is "rained".
On every day in February 2011 it would have rained somewhere in the world. So the answer is that it rained on 28 days in February 2011.