Possibly so. You must drive at the speed the conditions warrant. You can be sited for not doing so and if you have an accident and it is determined you exceeded the speed limit in the said conditions I would assume you will be faulted.
"If ~A then ~B" where ~A means the opposite of A. For example if A is "it rains all week" and B is "it rains on Tuesday" then if A then B is "if it rains all week, it rains on Tuesday" while if ~A then ~B is "if it doesn't rain all week, it doesn't rain on Tuesday" which doesn't necessarily have the same truth value as the first.
Yes, but they can be rewritten. The conditional statement "If it rains then I will get wet" can be written as "I will get wet if it rains" so that the sentence does not begin with if. In logic, these conditional sentences are also equivalents to "I will not get wet or it rains", which does not contain the word "if".
Yes it rains everyday
A lot
It never rains but it poors.
it rains and snows
The GFCI (Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter) may trip when it rains because water can create a path for electricity to flow to the ground, causing a ground fault. This triggers the GFCI to shut off power to prevent electric shock or fire hazards.
The roads become slick when it rains and driving the car can be dangerous.
it rains
rain rains rained raining Rains is the third person singular form of rain
Jessica Rains's birth name is Jennifer Rains.
"When" is a subordinate conjunction, "it" is a pronoun, and "rains" is a verb.
For When It Rains was created in 1994.
Claude Rains's birth name is William Claude Rains.
Traver Rains's birth name is Traver Douglas Rains.
Powerful winds and driving rains (which may contain hail) will blow away or strip the crops down to almost nothing.
Claude Rains Claude Rains