This could be a warm front or a stationary front. The stationary front would be more conducive to a long lasting rain event. With a warm front, you'd probably get at least a day, maybe two, of steady rain. Warm fronts can sometimes transition into stationary fronts though.
No Thunderstorms often form along cold fronts, but are generally associated with low pressure. However, a cold front is not necessary for thunderstorms to form.
Hail and tornadoes are most often associated with cold fronts, but can occur with dry lines or, lest often, warm fronts.
Cold fronts are most often associated with the severe storms that produce hail and tornadoes.
It can and often does. Rain that falls from a cumulus cloud is often showery in nature rather than light and steady.
Supercells are often associate with tornadoes.
Stationary fronts!
Nimbostratus
No...but a warm front brings (usually) steady precipitation, often spread over a large area.
Tornadoes most often form along a cold front.
In the South, tornadoes are most often associated with a cold front, though in Texas they may form along a dry line. In some cases, though, the tornadoes may form without a front. For example, landfalling hurricanes, which are not associated with fronts, often spawn tornadoes.
Before the warm front there are cirrus or cirrostratus clouds. Nearer to the front the clouds are stratoform and lower, often precipitating.
the weather will probably be warm and u will have nothing but clear or rainy skies.
No Thunderstorms often form along cold fronts, but are generally associated with low pressure. However, a cold front is not necessary for thunderstorms to form.
Press photographer is abbreviated PP. There are often initials in front of it like APP for associated press photographer and other things.
Cumulonimbus or nimbostratus often are the most common of clouds that bring steady precipitation. Other clouds bring rain and snow, the these two bring it most often.
Hail and tornadoes are most often associated with cold fronts, but can occur with dry lines or, lest often, warm fronts.
A tornado is not necessarily associated with a front at all. Tornadoes will often form along or ahead of a cold front or dry line, and can occasionally form along a wamr front. One common area where tornadoes may form is Larko's triangle, which is near the center of a low pressure system between the cold front, the warm front, and the first isobar. Tornadoes will often form in the outerbands of a tropical cyclone, where no fronts are involved.