Rain- y is a suffix still
Ame. (A-may) is the Japanese word for rain.
The root word, the basic linguistic component of successful is success.
lluvia means rain.
I believe the word is petrichor.
distract
The possessive form for the noun rain is rain's.
The word rainy means to be wet, drippy, drizzly, misty. Rainy means having much rain and marked by rain. Before the 12th Century is the first known time the word rainy was used.
No it is not, it is a noun (naming word). The adjective for rain is rainy.
The word 'rainy' is not a noun, it's an adjective, a word that describes a noun; for example a rainy day.The noun form is rain, a concrete noun; a word for a thing that can be seen and touched.
the root word is cirus
The root word is "nimbus," which means a type of cloud that typically brings rain.
The Latin word for 'rain' is pluvia. It's a feminine gender noun. A related word in Latin is the adjective 'pluvialis', which means 'bringing rain, growing after rain, or relating to rain'. Another related word is the adjective 'pluvius', which means 'of rain, rain-bringing, or rainy'.
The Latin word for 'rain' is pluvia. It's a feminine gender noun. A related word in Latin is the adjective 'pluvialis', which means 'bringing rain, growing after rain, or relating to rain'. Another related word is the adjective 'pluvius', which means 'of rain, rain-bringing, or rainy'.
You're probably thinking of the word "monsoon" and it refers to the wind bringing the rain.
"Precipitous" means a cloud brings rain.
"Precipitous" means a cloud brings rain.
No, it is not. The word rain is a noun, which can be used as an adjunct with other nouns as in rain cloud, rain barrel,and rain gauge. There is an adjective (rainy) and an adverb form (rainily) that is virtually never used.