its evaporate the water
The names of the groups of clouds that can produce rain are nimbostratus and cumulonimbus. The nimbostratus clouds are the ones we see that become very dark and produce a lot of rain or snow. The cumulonimbus clouds are responsible for lighter rain and thunderstorms.
Nimbostratus clouds and cumulonimbus clouds are the two main types of clouds that produce rain. Nimbostratus clouds are thick, dark clouds that cover the sky and bring steady, prolonged rain showers. Cumulonimbus clouds are large, towering clouds associated with thunderstorms, which can produce heavy rain showers, lightning, and thunder.
Rain clouds...obviouly!
I believe this question was intended to be: "Do cumulonimbus and nimbostratus clouds produce rain or snow?" The answer to this question is: "Yes, both types of clouds CAN produce precipitation, including rain and/or snow, depending on the temperature in the atmosphere."
Because in the water cycle condensed water makes clouds and clouds of course produce rain. :)
Nimbus clouds, specifically nimbostratus and cumulonimbus clouds, are the types of clouds that typically produce rain. These clouds are characterized by their thick, dark appearance and their ability to hold significant amounts of moisture which eventually falls as precipitation.
Cumulus clouds can develop into rain clouds, but they do not typically produce rain on their own. When cumulus clouds grow larger and combine with other clouds, they can form cumulonimbus clouds that produce precipitation.
It makes the clouds rain and that is all that matters
Rain-giving clouds are typically referred to as cumulonimbus clouds. These clouds are large, vertically-developed clouds that can produce heavy rain showers, thunderstorms, and even hail.
Stratus clouds can produce light precipitation like drizzle or light rain. They are generally thick, low-lying clouds that can bring sustained precipitation over a large area. However, they tend to produce less intense rainfall compared to other types of clouds like cumulonimbus clouds.
touch each other
No. those clouds are to high to produce precipitation.