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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. 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。

  3. 知乎,中文互联网高质量的问答社区和创作者聚集的原创内容平台,于 2011 年 1 月正式上线,以「让人们更好的分享知识、经验和见解,找到自己的解答」为品牌使命。知乎凭借认真、专业、友善的社区氛围、独特的产品机制以及结构化和易获得的优质内容,聚集了中文互联网科技、商业、影视 ...

  4. 2011年3月16日 · English, USA. Mar 16, 2011. #6. entangledbank said: 'Rains' refers to a season or period in which rain is usual: The harvest failed because the rains arrived late. I agree. It can also refer to a series of bouts of rain. "The rains over the last three weeks have saturated the soil and local officials are worried about mudslides." This implies ...

  5. 2017年1月13日 · Hi, friends. I have no chance to watch British or American weather reports on TV. I wonder which tense the weatherperson uses to describe what the weather will be. For example, does he / she say: ‘It will rain tomorrow’ or ‘It’s going to rain tomorrow’? Many thanks.

  6. 2016年9月27日 · Senior Member. Greece. British English (Sussex) Sep 27, 2016. #6. I think that when rain "sets in" it not only starts, but "establishes itself" . We should be going before the rain sets in - might be said after the first few drops have fallen, and before it starts raining more heavily and continuously. A heavy rain set in.

  7. 2013年11月18日 · Hi, I have a question. a) It started to rain. b) It is starting to rain. 1. Are both sentences grammatically correct? 2. Is there any difference between both sentences? 3. It began to rain a while ago, and it is still raining now. In this case, which sentence is correct? Thank you, in advance.

  8. 2022年4月8日 · The beauty after rain Or the beauty after raining? se16teddy Senior Member London but from ...

  9. 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.

  10. 2008年5月19日 · Canadian English. May 19, 2008. #7. If I were to use the singular "rains", I would use "the". If I use the plural "rains", I would not use "the" ie: "Because of recent heavy rains"; "Because of the recent heavy rain". "The" means a specific downpour. If it was sunny and clear a week ago and then started to rain and continued to rain, it means ...

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