Yes. More specifically, hail is a solid form of precipitation and is generally either balls or irregular lumps of ice.
hail is made up of pieces of ice, the solid state of water. So hail is solid.
No, hail is a solid form of precipitation.
Hail is solid clumps of ice.
What_are_two_solid_forms_of_watersee this answer
Yes, water can occur in actually all three phases: gas, liquid, and solid. Solid water would be a glacier, ice, hail, etc.
liquid or solid water falls to the ground as rain,sleet,snow,and hail
snow or hail
Snow or ice. If it passed through an intermediate water phase, it would be hail.
Hail is a solid state of matter. It forms when updrafts in thunderstorms carry water droplets high into the atmosphere where they freeze. These frozen droplets grow in size as they collide with other frozen droplets, eventually falling to the ground as hailstones.
Snow is formed from water vapors in cold clouds that have condensed into icy crystals Hail is a form of solid precipitation; ice.
In winter, water freezes and become a solid, like snowflakes,sleet or hail.
liquid or solid water falls to the ground as rain,sleet,snow,and hail