Do raining cats and dogs exist?
I heard lots of books that relate to raining cats/dogs. But do raining cats and dogs do rain like raining cats and dogs? Or it’s just a folktale or a legend?
Filed under: Cat Behavior
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oor… just a weird saying. there is a story to it, look it up. Just dont step in a poodle.
Fairytale…although it has rained frogs and fish
legend.
ARE YOU SERIOUS?? NO I DOESN’T RAIN CATS AND DOGS.. IT’S A SAYING!!
Yes! That’s how I got MY cat!
Its just an expression
It is just an old saying.
ok i dont think cats and dogs are just randomly going to start falling from the sky…?
This is an interesting phrase in that, although there’s no definitive origin, there are several speculative derivations.
Before we get to those, lets get some of the dafter suggestions out of the way.
The phrase seems isn’t related to the well-known antipathy between dogs and cats, which is made word in the phrase "fight like cat and dog". Aside from the presence of cat and dog in the phrase, there’s nothing at all to connect their fighting with raining.
Nor is the phrase in any sense literal, i.e. recording the fact that cats and dogs fell from the sky. Numbers of small creatures, of the size of frogs or fish, do occasionally get carried skywards in freak weather. That must happen to individual dogs or cats from time to time too, but there’s no record of groups of them being scooped up in that way. Not that we’d need meteorological record for that – it’s plainly implausible.
In fact "raining cats and dogs" makes sense figuratively and the explanations below that attempt to link the phrase to felines, canines and weather seem rather feeble.
Here goes though – take your pick:
It comes from mythology. Witches, who often took the form of their familiars – cats, are supposed to have ridden the wind. Dogs and wolves were attendants to Odin, the god of storms and sailors associated them with rain. Well, some evidence would be nice. There doesn’t appear to be any to support this notion.
Cats and dogs were supposed to be washed from roofs during heavy weather. This is a widely repeated tale. It got a lease of life with the message "Life in the 1500s", which began circulating on the Internet in 1999. Here’s the relevant part of that:
I’ll describe their houses a little. You’ve heard of thatch roofs, well that’s all they were. Thick straw, piled high, with no wood underneath. They were the only place for the little animals to get warm. So all the pets; dogs, cats and other small animals, mice, rats, bugs, all lived in the roof. When it rained it became slippery so sometimes the animals would slip and fall off the roof. Thus the saying, "it’s raining cats and dogs."
This is nonsense of course. It hardly needs debunking, but, lest there be any doubt…
Dogs lived in thatched roofs? No, of course they didn’t. Even accepting that mad idea, for them to have slipped off when it rained they would have needed to be on the outside – hardly the place an animal would head for to shelter from bad weather.
The phrase is supposed to have originated in England in the 17th century when city streets were filthy and heavy rain would occasionally carry along dead animals.
The idea that seeing dead cats and dogs floating by in storms would cause people to coin this phrase is just about believable. People may not have actually thought the animals had come from the sky, but might have made up the phrase to suit the occasion.
Another suggestion is that it comes from a version of the French word, catadoupe, meaning waterfall.
Well, again. No evidence. If the phrase were ‘raining cats’ or if there also existed a French word, dogadoupe we might be going somewhere with this one. As there isn’t lets pass this by.
Returning to facts rather than idle speculation, we do know that the phrase was in use in a modified form in 1653, when Richard Brome’s The City Wit, has the line:
"It shall raine … Dogs and Polecats".
Polecats aren’t cats as such but the jump between them in linguistic rather than veterinary terms isn’t large.
In a form more like the current version it appears in Jonathan Swift’s ‘A Complete Collection of Polite and Ingenious Conversation’ in 1738:
"I know Sir John will go, though he was sure it would rain cats and dogs".
More likely than any of the versions given above is that this is just a nice descriptive turn of phrase, which doesn’t relate to any particular event or practise.
There’s a similar phrase originating from the north of England – "it’s raining stair-rods". No one has gone to the effort of speculating that this is from mythic reports of stairs being carried into the air in storms and falling on gullible peasants. Its just a rather good vivid phrase giving a graphic impression of heavy rain.
Another similar phrase is "it’s raining like pitchforks", the first known reference of which is D. Humphreys’ Yankey in England, 1815:
"I’ll be even with you, if it rains pitchforks – tines downwards."
yes. I just stepped in a poodle.
now a little common sense goes a long way, are you expecting we will tell you that yorkshire terriors and siamese cats fall from the sky? what grade are we in now? I think even a kindergarten child would know better!
It means that it is raining really hard and there is alot of water. Like the rain is coming down in buckets is another one.
Do you really have to ask? That said, I have heard of weird weather phenomena where a tornado or some such sucked up frogs, toads, and other small critters and dumped them some miles away.
Flaming Idiot: LMAO!!!
It has never literally rained cats and dogs. It’s just an expression. BUT, there is a story of where it came from only I can’t remember what it is. I’ll see if I can find it for you.
Ok here it is. I found this site. I remember it had to do with thatched roofs. The first answer on there is the one I heard.
http://www.worldwidewords.org/qa/qa-rai1.htm
no it really doesnt rain cats and dogs, just rain, snow, ice, and sometimes acid-rain.it’s just a saying i think
no it don’t exsit but u must be pretty bored to ask that! duh of course it don’t!
yeah . it actually happens that when you step outside a dauschund falls on you.
umm. its from the the middle ages where the roof made out of straw would becom slippery in the rain and cats would fall through .. i think lol , something like that anyways
My cat got it’s head caught under the fence when it was raining and it drowned….does that count?
No sir it has never literally rained cats and dogs. I don’t quite know what the meaning behind this saying is though, exactly, and now that I’m thinking about it, it really makes no sense at all. Hmmmm.
I’ve seen it rain fish during a storm near the ocean.I suppose during a tornado it could rain cats,dogs or even horses and cows!!
Raining cats and dogs isn’t something that can happen unless they are falling off of buildings..
you’ll find out the truth as soon as you step in a POODLE
no, its just an expression that says that its raining hard.
No, it’s actually reinging cats & dogs…because pets rule.
In Aincent Greece cats and dogs would sit on the roof and when it rained they slid off hence the saying "It’s raining cats and dogs"
No, but i wish it did! I love animals and if it rained cats and dogs than i would have millions of animals. How Awesome would that be! But no it’s just an expression saying its raining hard down to the ground.
It has rained tadpoles, frogs, and fish…
and…
some people said if it rains worse than that it would be raining cats and dogs…
so now we say it is raining cats and dogs when it is REALLY pouring down.
I’ve never read or heard about it, although I have read that it rained frogs once. This was due to a hurricane sweeping through the area and it carried them off onto another county.
No it does’nt exist it is just an exageration.The fact about raining animals are that FISHES rain from the sky.There is a rumor [which i believe is true]that there is a river between the earth and the sky.
yes they so exsistr that one day your dog and cat is going to disappear and start raining lol
No, it is just a saying…
no what dummy would believe that
I understood the saying to come from the fact that when it rains alot cats and dogs tend to show up on peoples door steps. Either to get out of the rain or from running from the lightening. If you get one that falls from the sky, you must name it angel.
no but it does rain frogs and fish,, ask why in the religious section
not to my knowledge though that’d be awesome
it’s just a old saying
its just a saying… it means it is raining heavily
What do you think????? :- |>
no just a way to say that it is raining realy hard
it only happens when they hide in trees and cry alot