.because it is raining indicates that water is physically falling from the sky right now, while because it is rainy indicates that it is the sort of day where rain is extremely likely to happen, but doesn't necessarily mean that rain is. It will be frost tomorrow The reason is that in the first sentence, today is rainy, today is the object being described directly, so you don't need the pronoun 'it'
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In the second however, there is a comma so after the comma, the 'it' pronoun is needed to make the sentence correct (hence the 'it's').
Do the sentence it was raining and the sentence it rained mean the same thing
I walked to the park vs I was walking to the park mean the same thing It is perfectly idiomatic to say “it is rainy” to mean “it is raining” and vice versa, m.m., the same for snowy, icy, etc It is not necessary for snow or ice to accumulate to use these descriptions for the weather.
If i want to ask about the weather today whether is cold or hot, worm or cloudy or foggy, rainy or snowy etc What should i choose of these two (or may be there's another way) So, it seems like it is rainy now means it is raining a lot now Ok, let say, we look out through the window, and the rain is falling from the sky, and the rain is light not too heavy or a lot.
To talk about the weather, we idiomatically use it
It's raining (now) yesterday it was raining all day Yesterday it rained (at least once) to talk about the type of weather you might use rainy It is rainy in wales (usually) yesterday, it was rainy It was a rainy day
Use i didn't leave my home, for example. If it is rainy (sunny, windy, cloudy etc.) tomorrow sounds grammatical to me. Is it correct to say today is rainy (or tomorrow will be frost.)