Yes. It is what makes them a cloud.
Clouds do not 'carry' water, clouds are composed of water vapor.
Clouds are masses of condensed water vapor, therefore, all clouds are water.
Not always. Winds carry clouds in all different directions.
All clouds are condensing water vapor.
All clouds are made of water vapor.
Clouds carry large amounts of water vapor. Also, fog and steam carry large amounts of water vapor but is not as large or condence amount.
The convection is the source of all clouds and precipitation
The clouds are rain. all the clouds are is water vapor(thats a fancy name for microscopic water) the water is so SMALL in the clouds it is too light to fall. then when it is heavy enough to fall you get rain
ALL clouds are made out of water drops, though some clouds like cirrus are made of ice.
Charge is origimated in clouds due to friction from other clouds but there is no specific mechanism to carry it, they just bear it.
Basically, the water cycle is: the sun and wind evaporates water off the oceans. The water vapour rises to form clouds. The clouds rain on the land (and sea). The water either seeps underground and tops up the water table, or forms streams and rivers. The rivers carry the water back to the oceans, and the water cycling begins again.
they are puffy because water is inside the cloud. They are called cumulus clouds and are formed, like all clouds, of water vapor.