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  1. 比如rain在中国大火那个年代,浪漫满屋、蓝色生死恋、白色恋人等是中国80后一代接触的第一批真正意义上的韩国偶像剧。如果按照整个中国所了解的比重,不参考年龄层次的话。虽然我没有整体数据来作为参考,但是依照我个人的了解显然rain先生是占了上风

  2. 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.

  3. 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.

  4. 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 ...

  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. 2009年4月11日 · English / US. Apr 11, 2009. #2. Rain so heavy that it appears to come down in a continuous sheet of water, rather than in drops. Bienvenido/a al foro.

  7. 2019年8月24日 · 3 个回答. 我愿意用独特的英语思维为大家解决疑难问题!. 这是两种不同的时态,时态不同,表达的时间概念不同。. It rains 为一般现在时。. It is /was raining 为进行时态。. 时态不同。. It rains.是一般现在时,It is raining .是现在进行时。. It was raining.是过去进行时 ...

  8. 2007年4月28日 · Hi, Look at the sky! It looks like rain. Look at the sky! It looks like raining. These two sentences I just found on the net are interesting to me. Grammatically, they are both correct. But I was curious of which one you would like to use in conversation? Thanks.

  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. 2010年12月7日 · Dec 7, 2010. #2. In ordinary use, there is no difference, with one exception: "It could rain tomorrow" can be used in the absence of any knowledge of the weather forecast. That is, we might say "it could rain tomorrow" if we wanted to draw attention to the idea that bad weather could interfere with whatever we're planning for the next day.

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