No. When clouds are gray, that means the sunlight can barely shine through them. Usually cirrus clouds are thin, white, and wispy. The clouds you are seeing are probably stratus or altocumulus clouds.
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Clouds that are dark on the bottom are likely cumulonimbus clouds. That word comes from cumulus and nimbus. Cumulus means light, or fluffy. They're the kind of clouds you look for shapes in. Nimbus means rain. So, fluffy rain clouds is a rough translation. Cumulonimbus clouds bring rain, and possibly a tornado if you live in that area. It might be a heavy rain or a harsh thunderstorm. Just get inside as fast as you can!
The word 'seeing' is a gerund, the present participle of the verb 'to see' that functions as a noun in a sentence.The noun 'seeing' is a common, uncountable noun, a word for a thing.The word 'seeing' functions as an abstract noun as a word for understanding, realizing, comprehending; a word for a concept.The word 'seeing' functions as a concrete noun as a word for the physical act of looking at something; a word for a physical sense.
acid rain clouds would increase and would prevent you from seeing the sunset.
The word clouds is a common plural noun. It requires no apostrophe.The clouds looked puffy.If the word clouds has a possession or belonging, it needs an apostrophe.The clouds' shapes reminded me of animals.
You usually see shapes in cumulus clouds.
You are not seeing angles. It only looks that way because the clouds just moving about and your human mind makes them into shapes of fluffy dogs, angels, and other things.
because the wind blows them into different shapes. :)
Lenticular.
white fluffly makes shapes ;)
usually cumulus.
altitude
I lay on the ground and look for shapes in the clouds. You can ground yourself by planting your rubber soles firmly on the ground.
It will be difficult to answer this question accurately without seeing the collection of shapes.
Clouds make shapes in the sky as water molecules gather and the wind blows and moves and spreads the cloud out. The thicker the cloud the more dense the water molecules are.
No. When clouds are gray, that means the sunlight can barely shine through them. Usually cirrus clouds are thin, white, and wispy. The clouds you are seeing are probably stratus or altocumulus clouds.