You can feel it; you cannot see it.
There is a short beautiful poem discussing this very question:
Who has seen the wind?
Neither you nor I,
But when the trees bow down their heads the
Wind is passing by.
l love the above poem. it is delight ful. a wish to add bit more
air is life, breathe in, inhale full lung to feel strength, exhale..life less i mean .....experiencer is un seen to experience....i heard the state of hyperventilation syndrome is experienced the state of nothing ness..
The real question is What is ahead of you but you cant see it and the answer is The future.
In the air, I see clouds, birds, airplanes, and sometimes insects like bees and butterflies.
It's easy, the answer it The Future... It's in front of you but you can't see it............actually, you can't see air but it is most definitely there....or you would be dead
It's not that you see the actually air inside a tornado, but you actually see the debris, dust, and other objects that it picks up along the way. Sometimes, however, you see the tornado because of the moist air that's inside of it, which lets you be able to see it, kind of like a visible cloud.
There is no actual 'space'. Our environment is full of air.
No. You can see it expand the object that is containing the air as the air pressure increases.
Air because you can never see air.
No. You can see it expand the object that is containing the air as the air pressure increases.
Air because you can never see air.
The real question is What is ahead of you but you cant see it and the answer is The future.
In the air, I see clouds, birds, airplanes, and sometimes insects like bees and butterflies.
no
Air, which is a mixture of gases, exerts pressure. We can see this as we observe a breeze moving the leaves of trees around. Air can be compressed, and we can demonstrate that if we blow up a balloon. Air is transparent, and we can't see it. There are other properties of air that are a little hard to see as air is a very light, transparent gas mixture.
The air.
You can see your house from the air. You could be in an airplane or a hot air balloon.
Possibly, see an Air Force recruiter.
Yes. (see - barometer)