Not necessarily. Clouds form daily over both land and water.
Rainclouds form from water picked up from the earth's surface. If the clouds are over water, they obviously will pick up more moisture, and pick it up a lot easier, too.
Water in clouds is in gaseous form.
Water in clouds is in gaseous form.
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.
Great question everyone! Here is your answer: Clouds and rain form when water from the ocean evaporates leaving salinity. Then the water reaches the clouds and it gets stored there until eventually the cloud gets to heavy that all the water comes down. The water lands on land via ocean and the Water Cycle starts over again.
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.
water vapors combine together in the air. They form clouds.
the snow melts, it evaporates, and clouds form.
When water is in clouds it's a solid
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 typically form by 1000,000 droplets of water in the sky :D