Not necessarily. Clouds form daily over both land and water.
Water in clouds is in gaseous form.
Water in clouds is in gaseous form.
Clouds that form over water tend to have more moisture available to them, as water bodies provide a constant source of evaporation. This higher moisture content in maritime clouds allows for efficient condensation and precipitation processes to occur. In contrast, clouds forming over land may not have as much moisture available, leading to less efficient precipitation production.
Funny I had the smae question in a school test. A thunderstorm starts to form when water evaporates to form clouds. The warm air over the Earth's surface rises and pushes the clouds higher.
The clouds are formed by water vapor evaporating from the ocean. The water vapor condenses and falls again as rain (or snow) thereby completing the water cycle.
Evaporated water condenses in the atmosphere to form clouds.
water vapors combine together in the air. They form clouds.
Clouds form over mountains when moist air is forced upwards by the terrain. As the air rises, it cools and reaches its dew point, causing water vapor to condense and form clouds. The higher elevation of the mountains also contributes to the cooler temperatures required for cloud formation.
Water, because clouds are made of water in the form of "CONDENSATION" of the Water Cycle.
Clouds form condensed droplets of water around molecules. This is tiny particle.
Clouds are part of the water cycle. The water cycle is a description of how water gets used over and over again.Water evaporates from the sea, lakes or moist land when the sun heats it up. As it goes into the sky it cools down and condenses to form small water droplets. This is what clouds are made of. Clouds form rain which falls on the land which ends up in rivers, lakes and the sea... it then evaporates and goes back into the air and the cycle continues.
clouds typically form by 1000,000 droplets of water in the sky :D