Is called precipitation.
If you're talking about the basic water cycle, starting in the ocean, water evaporates into vapor (Evaporation) rising up until it reaches it's the dew point, then the water condenses and travel towards higher ground, sometimes it travels as far as sea level ground (Condensation), when it reaches that heavy point where the clouds is too heavy to carry the water it drops taking about 10-15 minutes from the clouds to reaches the surface of the Earth if clouds are in the strato zone (Precipitation).
Before the rain reaches the ground, water droplets form within clouds through the process of condensation when warm air rises and cools. The droplets then grow in size until they become heavy enough to fall as rain.
Ground water is on or in the ground, it does not reach it.
any water that fallls to the ground evaperates into the clouds
Water from clouds returns to the sea by falling as precipitation onto Earth's surface, such as rain or snow. This water then flows into rivers, streams, and eventually reaches the oceans through the water cycle.
The moisture in the ground combines with the the air to make water vapor, therefore creating clouds at ground level.
No
Ans: water vapour forming clouds: water that had previously evaporated (turned from liquid to gas) from the seas and ground reaches an altitude where that gaseous water cools to such a point that it precipitates to water droplets.
Yes, snow forms when water vapor in the atmosphere condenses into ice crystals within clouds. These ice crystals then join together to form snowflakes, which fall to the ground when they become heavy enough.
Evaporation
In solid form: sleet, hail, snow In liquid form: rain, drizzle, fog
in the ground a. clouds b. the ground c. animals d. dams