English, asked by swechchharai, 6 months ago

it is raining identify the terms

Answers

Answered by irishmanzano308
1

Answer:

it is raining -  it's raining

Explanation:

"It's raining" is a statement of current facts, meaning the person is telling someone that it is raining. "It rains" is a statement of fact, meaning someone is asserting that rain is something that happens. If the latter is in response to the former, it could be an ironic statement.

By the way, you're probably not right to identify 's raining with Is raining. That's an /s/, not a /z/; that is, you wouldn't say /zre'nIng/. But is has a /z/, not an /s/, and it shows up in fast speech rules when it really means is. For instance, if you meant to say He's reading and you were in a hurry, you'd say /zri'dIng/, not /sri'dIng/.

Well, the short answer is that it does not matter. The widely accepted explanation is that the “it” in “it is raining” does not refer to anything. If you are curious, the verb “rain” is sometimes used with a subject such as the sky and clouds.

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