Japan has entirely too much precipitation to have any deserts.
Deserts are defined as regions that receive less than 10 inches (250 mm) of precipitation per year on average. Some deserts receive virtually no precipitation, however.
there both deserts antarctica is a deserts they both have less precipitation
Yes, due to the very low humidity, deserts experience more evaporation than precipitation.
A desert is defined as a region that receives less than 10 inches (250 mm) of annual precipitation on average. Some deserts receive virtually no precipitation for centuries.
Your question is redundant. All deserts are classified as deserts because of the low precipitation.
Deserts are often cold. Deserts are created by a lack of precipitation, not by temperature.
The only true statement of the above is that all deserts experience very little precipitation.
More generally, they receive little "precipitation" (this can then include cold deserts).
All deserts have low precipitation and high evaporation rates.
A homograph for "deserts" is "deserts." It can refer to a barren land area with little precipitation or a term meaning to abandon someone or something.
Deserts receive less tha 10 inches (250mm) of precipitation per year. Deserts have an evaporation rate that far exceeds the precipitation rate.