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Rain Idioms + Weather Vocabulary for Fluent Conversations (B1–B2)
Description
🌧️ Learn English with real American vocabulary in context. This episode teaches weather words and rain vocabulary for serious B1–B2 English learners worldwide who want to become fluent, confident speakers of natural American English. English learners will hear and learn natural ways native speakers describe rain, from light rain (sprinkling, drizzling) to heavy rain (downpour, pouring, torrential rain).
The episode also includes common American English idioms like “raining cats and dogs” and “raining buckets,” helping ESL/EFL learners build vocabulary for real conversations and improve listening comprehension with everyday U.S. language.
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📝 Vocabulary list
1) Sprinkling: Very light rain, just a few drops, no need for cover.
2) Drizzling: Slightly harder than sprinkling, still not intense.
3) Light rain: More than drizzle, but still not heavy.
4) Barely raining: Very little rain, hardly any at all, almost unnoticeable.
5) Incessant rain: Constant and uninterrupted rainfall for a long period.
6) Downpour: Short, intense burst of heavy rain. Also called a deluge or a cloudburst
7) Clears up: The rain stops, and the weather becomes clear.
8) Flash floods: Rapid flooding due to intense rainfall.
9) Pouring: Heavy rainfall over a longer period.
10) Raining cats and dogs: Very heavy rain (idiom).
11) Constant showers: Continuous and uninterrupted rain.
12) Raining buckets: Pouring down with a large amount of rain (idiom).
13) Torrential rain: Heavy rainfall associated with storms, hurricanes, or monsoons.