Asked by rfvv
1. That's fine with me.
(Does 'with' mean 'being related to'?)
4. It's raining hard.
5. It's raining heavily. 2. It's raining much.
3. It's raining a lot.
6. It's raining cats and dogs.
(Are they all the same in meaning? Can we use 'much' instead of 'a lot'?) •English - Steve, Saturday, November 12, 2016 at 5:53am
#1. I don't think that's a good explanation. It just means that I agree.
#2 nope - However, it's common to say "It's not raining much"
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Thank you for your help.
2. It's raining much.
3. It's raining a lot.
2-2. It's not raining much.
Do you mean #2 is not used? Why is that?
#2-2 is used commonly, right?
(Does 'with' mean 'being related to'?)
4. It's raining hard.
5. It's raining heavily. 2. It's raining much.
3. It's raining a lot.
6. It's raining cats and dogs.
(Are they all the same in meaning? Can we use 'much' instead of 'a lot'?) •English - Steve, Saturday, November 12, 2016 at 5:53am
#1. I don't think that's a good explanation. It just means that I agree.
#2 nope - However, it's common to say "It's not raining much"
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Thank you for your help.
2. It's raining much.
3. It's raining a lot.
2-2. It's not raining much.
Do you mean #2 is not used? Why is that?
#2-2 is used commonly, right?
Answers
Answered by
Writeacher
I'm not sure why #2 is not used. It just isn't!
#3 is used a great deal, however, and so is #2-2.
#3 is used a great deal, however, and so is #2-2.
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