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  1. 2018年2月10日 · Rain is wet. Rain causes flooding. Rain enables plants to grow. The above are referring to rain in general. The rain has stopped. The rain is heavier now than earlier. The rain in South Africa is inadequate for current needs. The above refer to specific instances of rain - implicitly or explicitly.

  2. 2008年9月10日 · When we look outside and see rain, what we most often say is "it's raining." "It rains" would be used in a sentence like "it rains a lot in Oregon." It rains (in general), it is raining (right now). "We've had a lot of rain lately." Better, I think, than "there's"-- also, it doesn't sound quite right in the present tense.

  3. 说曲子,《rain》这首曲子急促中又裹挟着对即将获得自由的激动,总体处于一个亢奋的状态,符合人物内心的情绪,在影视中发挥的是抒情功能。抛开情节听曲子,是肯定会有不一样的感觉,但是音乐本身就具有抒情性,所以不结合剧情也没有关系。

  4. 2009年1月11日 · Russian. Jan 11, 2009. #3. In my native language when someone walks when it rains, he/she goes " under the rain". But I've never heard this expression in english and it sounds pretty weird. However when it snows and someone walks, we say he/she goes "in the snow".

  5. 2023年1月24日 · French. Jan 24, 2023. #1. "This is a dark parade Another rough patch to rain on, to rain on" from Ed Sheeran song called Overpass Gravity I’m trying to understand the meaning of what he sings. It look like a mix between: 1) to go trough a rough patch 2) to rain on sb’s parade but I’m confused as a non native English speaker (I’m french).

  6. 2022年3月12日 · 1-There will be rain in all parts tomorrow. 2-Don't go out in the rain. 3-A light rain began to fall. According to Oxford Dictionary, this noun is " [countable, uncountable]". I have the same problem with this one. 1- It was scorching and there wasn't a cloud in the sky. 2-The plane was flying in cloud most of the way.

  7. 2013年5月23日 · Beryl from Northallerton said: I'm with Kate on this. If there is a difference (and I suspect that there is) between [subject + verb + 'rain'] and [subject + verb + 'the rain'], then it's a highly illusive difference. However, it's not the standard difference between definite and indefinite. To me the difference is quite real, but for some ...

  8. 2016年5月31日 · There was heavy rain in California last night. I infer that everywhere in California there was heavy rain. I was walking through heavy rain one day and saw him standing at a bus stop soaked wet. It was heavy rain I was walking through--I have no idea what it was like on the other side of town--neither does my sentence infer anything either way.

  9. 2009年9月17日 · Penang. American English. Sep 17, 2009. #3. That sounds good... and in monsoons, I've described it as horizontal rain. Having just read Cagey's answer, I realize that it might more frequently be described as slanting, e.g. The slanting rain found them under the eaves where they were sheltering. Last edited: Sep 17, 2009.

  10. 2014年3月1日 · Mar 2, 2014. #7. velisarius said: I couldn't rule out 1. "It must rain tomorrow", if it meant "I fervently hope it will rain tomorrow". A farmer is desperate for rain because the crops are dying and he owes money to the bank: "It must rain tomorrow, or I'll lose all of this year's crop." Agreed.

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