what do all of them mean
The 5 forms of precipitation such as:-rain-dew-snow-hail-frost-sleet-glaze
No, glaze is not a type of precipitation. Glaze refers to a thin layer of ice that forms on surfaces due to freezing rain. Precipitation includes forms of water, such as rain, snow, sleet, or hail, that fall from the sky.
The 4 main precipitaions are rain, hail, sleek and snow
Close would be : Aang (as in the word Yang only with an a ) - glaze . Aang- glaze. But if you ask a Speaker of French that give it to you.
You can but you have to get it at warehouses or ask anyone who works at a nail salon
If it freezes in the air, it is called sleet (ice pellets). If it freezes on contact with cold surfaces, it is called freezing rain (called glaze in the UK).
When snow melts and refreezes near the ground, it forms a layer of ice known as a "glaze" or "ice crust." This can create hazardous conditions for walking or driving.
Sleet is snow that melts in the sky and re-freezes before hitting the ground as ice pellets and Freezing rain is snow that melts into water and doesn't re-freeze before hitting the ground...but the ground temperature is below 32 degrees, so the rain will freeze on contact causing a glaze of ice.
Freezing rain occurs when rain falls and freezes upon contact with surfaces, creating a smooth and transparent ice layer. Sleet consists of ice pellets formed when raindrops freeze before reaching the ground. Freezing rain poses a greater hazard as it creates a slippery ice glaze on surfaces, while sleet accumulates as small ice pellets on the ground.
Precipitation consisting of generally transparent frozen raindrops that form when snowflakes fall through a warmer layer and melt, before passing through a sub-freezing layer near the surface and completely refreezing into ice pellets. Sleet does not freeze on contact like freezing rain (also known as glaze).
I hope it does not sleet tonight! I don't like to drive in the sleet.
Hail or sleet.