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Discover Ludwig'bad rain' is not a correct phrase to use in written English.
A better phrase to use to describe rain with undesirable effects would be 'heavy rain' or 'torrential rain', depending on the intensity. Example sentence: The heavy rain caused flooding in the small town.
Exact(6)
The weather was bad, rain all summer.
I mean, we had bad rain, we had a storm, we had wind, we had snow.
In Boston, the weather had been so bad — rain, sleet, icy roads, gusting winds — that race organizers came closer to cancelling the marathon than at any time in its then hundred-and-eleven-year history.
Love turned out to be soul-crippling, stomach-turning, weirdly claustrophobic: a sense of endlessness bottled up inside him, endless weight, endless potential, with only the small outlet of a shivering pale girl in a bad rain jacket to escape through.
If there's very bad rain, snow or ice on the road, you should consider staying at home if possible.
When it starts to get late, or the weather gets bad (rain, wind, cold temperatures, etc)., go inside and find some other fun stuff to do - there are tons of possibilities.
Similar(54)
Bad rains last year mean that production was down.
"They want to know, will they have good rains or bad rains, when will the rainy season start?
Those who have grumbled eternally about bad rains can now moan instead about traffic jams into Delhi.
Traditionally, farmers try to reduce their exposure to risks like crop failure (from bad rains or crop parasites) by minimising their investment in farming inputs.
But the conditions were bad, with rain, heavy cloud and lightning.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com