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clouds
Hail forms when updrafts in thunderstorms carry raindrops into colder regions of the atmosphere. As the raindrops freeze, they grow in size and eventually fall to the ground as hailstones. Hail is typically associated with cumulonimbus clouds, which are large, towering clouds that produce thunderstorms.
cumulonimbus clouds
rain
Hail forms in cumulonimbus clouds, which are large, dense, and towering clouds associated with thunderstorms. Within these clouds, strong updrafts carry raindrops high into the atmosphere where they freeze, forming hailstones. These hailstones can grow larger as they are then circulated within the storm cloud before eventually falling to the ground.
That would be hail. Hail forms when updrafts in a cumulonimbus cloud carry raindrops into extremely cold areas of the atmosphere, causing them to freeze into layered lumps or balls of ice.
Hail normally forms in cumulonimbus clouds.
None do. It is the other way around. Tornadoes form from cumulonimbus clouds.
Tornadoes are spawned by cumulonimbus clouds, which are multi-level clouds.
Cumulonimbus clouds form lightning
There is no such thing as a cumulonimbus tornado. A cumulonimbus cloud is a ver large towering cloud. Most thunderstorms are cumulonimbus clouds, and some of the strongest of these storms are what produce tornadoes.
it forms towering cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds