Cirrus it is the high altitude looks like hair in the sky and usually means fair weather
Clouds are like fluffy pillows in the sky, floating carelessly above our heads. They can also be compared to cotton candy, sweet and light, melting away as the day goes on. Some may even say clouds are like a painter's canvas, constantly changing and creating beautiful masterpieces in the sky.
Clouds that look like cotton balls are probably cumulus clouds.
Fluffy clouds?
Fluffy cotton-like clouds are called cumulus clouds. These clouds are typically seen on fair weather days and have a distinctive puffy appearance.
Watch the clouds above me
Subj : your cousins and you Pred : like to play and like to watch
Matthew is the subject and like to read is the predicate
Clouds can form at various altitudes, depending on the type of cloud. High-level clouds like cirrus clouds can form as high as 20,000 feet above sea level or more. However, lower clouds like stratus clouds typically form closer to the Earth's surface.
I like to watch the clouds change color while the sun is setting.
You have to know types of clouds like cirrus clouds. You also have to know which clouds bring rain and snow, sleet and hail, lightning and thunder. Watch the news and see what meteorologists do!
Well, depending on what shows you want to watch and how often you would like to watch them. Usually, satellite can be blocked by storm clouds or clouds in general. I would say that cable is better.
The predicate in that sentence is "looked like a huge white elephant". The subject is "it".
It looks like a blue and green sphere, but you can see all of the clouds floating above the Earth.
The predicate part of the sentence tells what the subject does or has. It can also describe what the subject is or is like.
All clouds are diffiened into four layers as follows- low level clouds-stratus, stratocumulus,nimbostratus and fog(really low stratus) medium level clouds-altocumulus,altostratus high level clouds-cirrocumulus,cirrostratus and cirrus. many level clouds- these are usually convective clouds like cumulonimbuses. stratocumulus for A+
Clouds vary in height above the Earth's surface from zero (called Fog) to "Noctilucent" clouds, about 50 miles above the surface. Common Cumulus clouds have their bottoms very roughly a mile above the surface. If you know the "dew point" from a weather forecast and there are clouds, you can usually estimate their height by multiplying one third of the difference between the surface temperature and the dew point by 1000 feet, so, for example, if the temperature is 72 degrees (F) and the dewpoint is 60 degrees, the clouds start to form at an altitude of (72-60)/3x1000 feet, or 4,000 feet. If there is a second layer of clouds above that, they are presumably ice clouds and their altitude is probably about (72-32)/3x1000 feet, or 13,000 feet.