because the rain water soaks through your outer layer of clothing
An example of affirming the consequent fallacy is: "If it is raining, then the streets are wet. The streets are wet, therefore it is raining."
It was raining, raining, raining hard. It was falling on my head. It was falling on the stars. It was falling on my shoes. I got soaking wet I got soaking wet. But I stayed outside. I stayed outside. The rain was sweet. The rain was warm. The rain was soft It reminded me of home It was raining, raining, raining hard. It was falling, falling, falling on the stars It was raining, raining, raining hard. It was falling, falling, falling on the stars. Soft rain Raining, raining Sweet rain Raining, raining Warm rain Raining, raining Sweet soft Raining, raining Warm rain Raining, raining Sweet soft Raining, raining Warm rain Raining, raining
If it's raining: wet.
you put it in the tumble dryer
Who, or what has been raining; it. I believe that the word "it" is the subject of this sentence.
Yes a dog does know when it is raining and he will like it inside so that he does not get wet.
If x then y. If y then z. Therefore, if x then z. Example: If it is raining, the ground is wet. If the ground is wet, people will slip. Therefore, if it is raining, people will slip.
Likely your belt(s) are slipping when they get wet and are not delivering power from the alternator to the battery. Check your belts or tensioner.
Steeplechase
It would just get wet.
An example of a line of reasoning is: "If it is raining outside, then the ground will be wet. The ground is wet, therefore it must be raining outside." This shows how one statement leads to another in a logical sequence.
You would get wet - the wet grass would bung up your lawnmower deck