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  1. Taking a rain check is a polite way of saying "no" to an invitation, especially in American English. A rain check (this dictionary entry also has pronunciation) is. a ticket that can be used later if a game, show, etc. is cancelled because of rain. Rain checks started with rain, but now stores may give a rain check at other times, like when a ...

  2. 2017年5月12日 · Use "in the rain", because the rain is around you, not just above you. Something like "in the water". That would be underwater, under the surface of the water. Rain doesn't have such a quality. Still you can be "in the water", meaning water surrounds you in general.

  3. 2018年4月2日 · The rain is neither on nor in the street. This is not a matter of grammar, but how "rain" works. Once it is on the street it isn't rain anymore, it is a puddle or a stream. Rain is type of weather. The rain is not normally restricted to just the street. You would just say

  4. Example 1 - Using the Past-Participle of the Main Verb (Rain/ed) Q: "How long has it been raining?" A: "It has rained for two hours [and will likely continue to do so in the future]."

  5. 2015年3月30日 · In this case, "rain" is a quote about the weather. Since it is a quote, it does not have a tense and is correct. " (The sky) is raining." "If it (the sky) rains tomorrow, we won't go to the park." Now we are talking about an action that the sky is taking - it has rained, it will rain, or it is raining.

  6. 2015年7月27日 · Yes, if you "check" or "check-in" luggage, you turn it in at the ticket counter and it will be transported in the cargo hold and you pick it up at the baggage claim at the end of your flight. On the other hand, if you "carry on" luggage, you bring it on the plane with you. Share. Improve this answer. answered Jul 27, 2015 at 15:16.

  7. 2017年9月20日 · In Mary Oliver's poem wild geese, is it that the pebbles are moving due to the rain You do not have to be good. You do not have to walk on your knees For a hundred miles through the desert,

  8. 2019年3月23日 · In American English, "The rain let up," is a very common idiomatic phrase. In fact I think that expression might be just as commonly heard as, "The rain stopped." "Let up" could mean that the rain completely stopped, or that it just became less intense, either momentarily or for the rest of the day.

  9. 2020年7月6日 · Well, “What makes rain?” and “What makes it rain?” would yield two different answers. The former could be answered as simply as saying clouds. Or, the former could be answered with a more complex description of the composition of the rain.

  10. 2019年7月30日 · What's the meaning of "make it rain X"? Looking up the idiom I found the following definitions: (idiomatic) to bring prosperity or work to an enterprise by selling, inventing or other productive or successful activity. (idiomatic) to throw a substantial amount of paper money so that it falls on a crowd, audience, performer, or group of ...

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