They fall in Different shape but they are the same shape
their shape, each snowflake has a unique shape.
No, each snowflake is unique in shape due to variations in temperature and humidity as they form in the atmosphere. This uniqueness is caused by the individual path that each snowflake takes as it falls to the ground.
Well, it may be hard to find two snowflakes that look identical, but you can classify snow crystals according to their shapes. Some types of snowflakes are Hexagonal Plates, Stellar Plates, Stellar Dendrites, Fernlike Stellar Dendrites, and many, many more. Example: This snowflake is a Hexagonal Plates. Each and every snowflake looks different.
well if a snowflakes melts at 80 degrees then the snowflake will be a puddle of water. So the temperature has to be a reasonable freezing point to keep the shape structured together. your welcome <3 :))
each snowflake is different, so there are endless amounts of snowflakes.
Snowflakes can vary from the size of a speck of dust (powder snow) all the way up to well over an inch.
if you mean sort of anti-personification, then you can virtually compare a homosapien to almost ANY object. EX: She had a coat of water over her face, so it glistened like a snowflake. or Everyone is different, just as unique as a snowflake. I would say you could compare people to almost any noun.
It is a fractal: each enlargement of the snowflake is an identical image.
A snowflake is a pretty crystal of frozen water that forms when water vapor freezes quickly in the atmosphere. Each snowflake is unique in shape and design due to variations in temperature and humidity during its formation.
Each snowflake is unique.
Snowflakes can have potentially infinite shapes due to variations in temperature, humidity, and other factors during their formation. Each snowflake is unique, and it is estimated that there can be trillions of different variations in their shapes.
No, a snowflake is not a liquid. It is a solid crystal. And each crystal in unique and unlike any other snowflake.