usually cumulus.
Clouds get their shapes from the movement of air currents and the condensation of water vapor in the atmosphere. Different types of clouds form under various weather conditions, resulting in the unique shapes and structures we see in the sky. Factors such as temperature, humidity, and wind play a role in shaping clouds.
Clouds can sometimes appear to form familiar images due to a psychological phenomenon called pareidolia, which is the tendency for the brain to perceive meaningful patterns in random stimuli. Our brains are wired to recognize patterns and shapes, so when we see clouds that resemble familiar objects, animals, or shapes, our minds automatically try to make sense of what we are seeing.
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.
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.
because the clouds are basically watervapour and if there wernt clouds there wouldn't be much rain
You usually see shapes in cumulus clouds.
Clouds get their shapes from the movement of air currents and the condensation of water vapor in the atmosphere. Different types of clouds form under various weather conditions, resulting in the unique shapes and structures we see in the sky. Factors such as temperature, humidity, and wind play a role in shaping clouds.
Lenticular.
Pareidolia
white fluffly makes shapes ;)
altitude
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.
Constellations don't really exist. The individual stars exist, but the patterns, and the shapes that we "see" in the sky, are entirely imaginary. You "get" constellations when your imagination forms shapes from the separate unconnected points of light in the sky. We human beings are excellent at seeing shapes and patterns; even when there are no shapes or patterns! We make them up in our minds.
Clouds can sometimes appear to form familiar images due to a psychological phenomenon called pareidolia, which is the tendency for the brain to perceive meaningful patterns in random stimuli. Our brains are wired to recognize patterns and shapes, so when we see clouds that resemble familiar objects, animals, or shapes, our minds automatically try to make sense of what we are seeing.
easy go out and play I find that most children have a liking to cloud shapes. Perhaps to sit on a bench or lay on a field or lay on a bench and see what shapes they can make out of the clouds above.
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.
they are puffy because water is inside the cloud. They are called cumulus clouds and are formed, like all clouds, of water vapor.