Wet hail is hail that has a coating of liquid water on it.
It is not so much the height as it is the number of times the strong up draft carries the slowly building wet iceballs back up to the freezing zone before they finally fall out of the cloud. The more trips up, the bigger the hail.
Hail Hail the Celts Are Here was created in 1961.
"Hail alley," averages seven to nine hail days per year.
Yes. Hail is ice.
No. Hail does not turn into snow.
At first, no. But then they hail melts... leaving you wet.
something cold and wet and painful
The victims loved the ss i am telling you dis because i am Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla hail Hitla scisim de German gorhegano
Hail Hail the Celts Are Here was created in 1961.
It is not so much the height as it is the number of times the strong up draft carries the slowly building wet iceballs back up to the freezing zone before they finally fall out of the cloud. The more trips up, the bigger the hail.
Water. Snow, hail, or any frozen substance any form of precipitation is frozen water. It can be warmer or colder in the atmosphere, depending on the front. What happens is water freezes at a temperature of 32.5 degrees Fahrenheit. Hail is formed when the water freezes, gets wet, and that layer freezes. This can happen several times, and you can have dangerous, golf ball sized hail.
dry winters, wetter springs and summer, highly changeable weather, often windy, and some occasional monstrous thunderstorms with damaging hail.
Hail can have many meanings, such as "hailing" a taxi, "hail" that falls from the sky, "hail" as in "greet," etc. Though I'm not sure which context you're referring to, the hail that falls from the sky is 'arare.' "Hail" as in "Hail to the king!" is 'banzai.' "Hail" as in "greet" can be 'aisatsu suru.'
"Hail alley," averages seven to nine hail days per year.
no you can not stop hail
nothing but hail
Hail- to rain down with chunks of ice Hail- to cheer or greet