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Raining cats and dogs
Idiom in English used to describe heavy rain From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The English-language idiom "raining cats and dogs" or "raining dogs and cats" is used to describe particularly heavy rain. It is of unknown etymology and is not necessarily related to the raining animals phenomenon.[1] The phrase (with "polecats" instead of "cats") has been used at least since the 17th century.[2][3]

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Etymology
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A number of possible etymologies have been put forward to explain the phrase.[4]
One possible explanation involves the drainage systems on buildings in 17th-century Europe, which were poor and may have disgorged their contents, including the corpses of any animals that had accumulated in them, during heavy showers. This occurrence is described in Jonathan Swift's 1710 poem "Description of a City Shower":[4]
Drowned puppies, stinking sprats, all drenched in mud,
Dead cats and turnip-tops come tumbling down the flood.
Another explanation is that "cats and dogs" may be a corruption of the Greek word Katadoupoi, referring to the waterfalls on the Nile,[1] possibly through the old French word catadupe ('waterfall'). In old English, catadupe meant a cataract or waterfall.
It has been suggested[who?] that "Cats and dogs" may come from the Greek expression kata doxa, which means "contrary to experience or belief"; if it is raining cats and dogs, it is raining unusually hard. However, there is no evidence to support the theory that the expression was borrowed by English speakers.[1]
An online rumor largely circulated through email claimed that, in 16th-century Europe, animals could crawl into the thatch of peasant homes to seek shelter from the elements and would fall out during heavy rain. However, no evidence has been found in support of the claim.[5]
Another possibility is the phrase is a truncated version of the 1592 sentence "Instead of thunderboltes shooteth nothing but dogboltes or catboltes". Dogbolts being a term for iron bolts for securing a door or gate and catbolts being a term for the bolts for fastening together pieces of timber.[1]
There may not be a logical explanation; the phrase may have been used just for its nonsensical humor value, or to describe particularly heavy rainfall, like other equivalent English expressions ("raining pitchforks", "raining hammer handles").
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Equivalent expressions in other languages
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Other languages have equally bizarre expressions for heavy rain.[6][7]
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References
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