They're big and puffy... try looking at them in the sky sometime.
Clouds.
No. The surface of Venus is obscured by thick clouds. If you could fly above the clouds then you would see the same stars that you see from Earth.
The moon does not have clouds like we see on Earth. It has an exosphere, which is a very thin layer of gases, including sodium and potassium, but these do not form clouds.
Clouds do have undeniable presence but you can see them depending upon the concentration of the vapors. They hide the view of heavenly bodies.
Venus has a surface gravity slightly less than Earth's. It also has clouds, but not like Earth clouds -- Venus clouds are sulfuric acid, suspended in the dense, superheated carbon dioxide atmosphere. See the related link for more information.
The clouds that we normally see, such as rain clouds, are in the Earth's atmosphere and therefore are not in space. However, there do exist clouds in space, which have been observed by astronomers. They do not have the same chemical composition as clouds in our atmosphere.
dumb people
Basically blue. You can make out land and clouds also.
There will be no earth there will only clouds
Yes. There are ALWAYS clouds somewhere on Earth.
The photos of Earth taken from the Moon show oceans and clouds. Nothing else is distinguishable.
There are dust storms and clouds on Mars. Winds are generated through the heating of the martian atmosphere. There are no water clouds like we see on earth though.