No, that is just a metaphor meaning "it's raining heavily".
No.
no more than it hails taxis. Yes, if you look very closly at a rain drop.......they are puppies and kitties. =] Yes, if you look very closly at a rain drop.......they are puppies and kitties. =]
dogs and cats and dogs and cats and dogs and cats and ........
Cats do but dogs don't
Dogs hate cats because cats are stupid.
They don't.. Dogs act like dogs and cats act like cats.
'It rained like cats and dogs.'
it was rainy and cold and Abe Lincoln was president it rained cats and dogs
stormed rained cats and dogs pour pelt stream pour out decant pepper bombard pullulate rain buckets
no
No, i love dogs and hate cats and no-one ever said that was racist
Cats and dog's
no more than it hails taxis. Yes, if you look very closly at a rain drop.......they are puppies and kitties. =] Yes, if you look very closly at a rain drop.......they are puppies and kitties. =]
hawks, cats, dogs. What ever can get their paws on them!
There have been documented cases of small animals like fish or frogs falling from the sky. In such cases strong wind events like tornadoes or waterspouts had picked up the animals initially.
Dogs will usually eat baby cats but not every dog does it just some.I don't know about EAT, but kill definetly
An example of an idiom in the book "The Best School Year Ever" is "the apple of someone's eye." This idiom is used to show that someone is cherished or loved deeply. In the book, the Henderson children are seen as the apple of Mrs. Cavanagh's eye, despite their mischievous behavior.
no it has int