It might shake only when passing through turbulence. Clouds may or may not be turbulent. Pilots learn which are and which are not turbulent. Clouds that occur in even layers are very smooth. Thunderheads and lenticulars are often violent and are usually best avoided.
It depends on the force of the storm. -fairyboomer
Initially, excess water will be flung off. The now moist cloth, if continued to be waved in the air, will begin to slowly dry as the moisture is evaporated as it passes through the air. This is why a windy, dry day is the best day on which to hang out washing on the line.
The past tense of shake is shook, not shaken.
Yes
shaking
If an airplane passes through a mountain it will be tunnelling underground, probably as a result of having crashed. Anything passing through solid rock is going to be subject to an element of turbulence.
It depends on the force of the storm. -fairyboomer
what shake it up character would definitly perfer to travel by car not airplane
Cece
Who passes bills to let your mother shake her saggy bags all over my block?
Rocky would rather take a car than airplane on the show shake it up. Rocky is terrified of airplanes, so Cece takes her to a hypnotist to get her her out pf her fear of flying.
It was Tinka Hessenheffer that didn't want to go by plane.
Yes, that is not a problem. I bring big bags of protein powder that I mix with water on the airplane to make a protein shake. I travel about 5 times a year and it's never been a problem.
The aircraft, of course, moves more slowly, and may experience a very slight shake as it goes subsonic.
Through fan mail
use diet coke with mentos. dump sum out and stick mentos on tape and put it in there . shake and open
Sounds like a blown head gasket.