Antarctica and the Atacama Desert receive little rainfall.
The place on Earth with the least amount of recorded rainfall is the Dry Valley in Antarctica.
No. There is way too much rainfall and water in the state for there to be any deserts there.
Rain does occur in deserts but not as frequently as in non-desert areas.
The only thing all deserts have in common is low rainfall.
Deserts have little rainfall. However, if the desert is irrigated, it can be, and is, quite porductive.
Deserts get little rainfall and some of them are quite hot - but not all. There are cold deserts also.
Deserts occur when there isn't enough rainfall to sustain a normal amount of plant life.
The Atacama Desert is one of the two driest deserts on earth. Some areas have received no measurable rainfall in recorded time.
10 inches of rainfall
Deserts by definition are areas that receive very little or no rainfall, The Netherlands is a small country of 41,848 km 16,158 sq mi and receives an average rainfall of 793mm or 31.2" per year so the answer is no, there are no deserts.
The Antarctic is too cold for rainfall even during its summer so any precipitation would be in the form of snow. Therefore it would have no rainfall at all, which is less than most deserts.
Virginia has no deserts. It receives too much rainfall to be considered a desert.