The sentence...The rain fell against the window....contains several parts of speech. The (article) rain (subject/noun) fell (verb) against the window. (prepositional phrase) against (preposition) the (article) window (object of the preposition/noun)
Write a proper sentence so we can understand.
Rain and water cause water to move throughout the hydrosphere.
The squall may have passed you but the rain is still falling elsewhere. If sunlight passes through the rain, you will see a rainbow as the water droplets work as a prism and split the sunlight into it's component colours.
That should be "affect" not "effect". Acid rain causes stone and bricks to erode more rapidly than they normally would, and iron structures will oxidize (rust) more quickly; as a general rule, the softer the material, the greater the erosion.
Here, through is an adverb. If through is followed by an object (through the rain, through Indian territory), then it would be acting as a preposition.
The adverb form of drizzle is drizzly.An example sentence is: "the rain was a bit drizzly yesterday".
No, "suddenly" is not a complete sentence. It is an adverb that describes how an action is performed in a sentence.
The rain permeated through the screen.
Leaving metal tools out in the rain can cause them to deteriorate quickly.
Indeed can be used as a adverb, or as an interjection.Here is an example of indeed used as an adverb, Indeed, it did rain as hard as predicted.And as an interjection, Indeed! I can scarcely believe it.
The rain soaked through the tear in the umbrella
No, it is not. The word rain is a noun, which can be used as an adjunct with other nouns as in rain cloud, rain barrel,and rain gauge. There is an adjective (rainy) and an adverb form (rainily) that is virtually never used.
[object Object]
She trudged glumly through the rain, feeling the weight of her disappointment.
As an adverb: The weather report says that it's likely to rain today. As an adjective: When we get near the city we can find a likely place for lunch.
water evaporating quickly from earth's surface and condensing quickly forming rain droplets.