rain

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Neither the defense nor the rain was able to stop Tulsa's offense.

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Definitions (43)

Toggle American Heritage definitions American Heritage Dictionary (13)

  1. noun Water condensed from atmospheric vapor and falling in drops.
  2. noun A fall of such water; a rainstorm.
  3. noun The descent of such water.

Toggle Century definitions Century Dictionary (22)

Toggle GNU Webster definitions GNU Webster's 1913 (4)

Toggle WordNet definitions WordNet (4)

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Examples (50)

  • Neither the defense nor the rain was able to stop Tulsa's offense. —  Yahoo! News: Top Stories
  • "If it doesn't rain, then Brawn Grand Prix should win but, if it does rain, then things might look a little bit different," Williams 'Nico Rosberg ventured, "But the rain is the only chance that we all have, I think, to change that." —  Crash.Net Motorsports Newsfeed
  • He should like to ask the lecturer if he could give the name of one single scientific farmer who had prospered Having said this much, the old gentleman put on his overcoat and busted out of the room, and several others followed him, for the rain was already splashing against the window-panes. —  Hodge and His Masters
  • "For the rain was almost blinding, and I was drenched, but I did not even know it. —  King Midas: a Romance
  • The sound of the rain is almost hypnotic. —  MacBros' Place
 

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Roget's II Roget's II: The New Thesaurus

Allen's Allen's Synonyms and Antonyms

Suggestions Wordniks Suggest

Used in the same context Used in the Same Context

storm ·  snow ·  shower ·  wind ·  cloud ·  dust ·  heat ·  sun ·  darkness ·  breeze ·  spray ·  flood

Used in the same contextWord Family

rain:   rains ·  rained ·  raining
Roget's II: The New Thesaurus, Third Edition by the Editors of the American Heritage® Dictionary. Copyright © 2003, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Etymologies (4)

Toggle American Heritage etymologies American Heritage Dictionary (1)

  1. Middle English, from Old English regn, rēn.

Toggle Century etymologies Century Dictionary (3)

  1. Early modern English rayne, from Middle English rein, reyn, reyne, reane, reʒn, rien, ren, ran, from Anglo-Saxon regn (often contr. rēn) = Old Saxon regan, regin = OFries. rein = Dutch regen = Middle Low German regen = Old High German regan, Middle High German regen, German regen = Icelandic Swedish Danish regn = Goth, rign, rain; cf. Latin rigare, moisten (see irrigation), Greek βρέχειν, wet (see embrocation).
  2. from Middle English raynen, reinen, reynen, reʒnen, rinen, rynen (preterit rainde, reinede, rinde; sometimes strong, ron, roon), from AS, rignan, rarely regnan, usually contracted rīnan, ry¯nan (preterit rīnde; rarely strong, rān), = Dutch regenen = Middle Low German regenen = Old High German reganōn, regonōn, Middle High German regenen, German regnen = Icelandic regna, rigna = Swedish regna = Danish regne = Gothic (Moesogothic) rignjan, rain; from the noun: see rain, n.
  3. Origin obscure.
 

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/reɪn/
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