Nimbus clouds; they are usually a sign of heavy rains.
Stratus clouds are generally associated with overcast skies and can bring drizzle or light rain. They do not necessarily indicate bad weather, but can be a precursor to potentially rainy conditions.
Stormy bad weather like rain.
Large raincloud. There are two parts to this question. The word itself stands for two separate things. Cumulus clouds are the large clouds that often usher in thunderstorms or heavier rains. We also see them in some nicer weather days popping up in fair weather. Pilots call these cumulus clouds popcorn cumulus, or fair weather cumulus because no rain or bad weather is occurring at that moment. They can become bigger issues as the day wears on. Nimbus is the second portion of this word. Nimbus means water is leaving the cloud and hitting the ground. Therefore your cloud is a large puffing storm cloud that is emitting rain that is hitting the ground.
A wall cloud is typically associated with severe weather events such as tornadoes, making it more dangerous than a bubble cloud which is harmless and mainly a result of condensation. Wall clouds are characterized by rotating updrafts and are often found in supercell thunderstorms, indicating the potential for severe weather. Bubble clouds are usually small and puffy with no significant weather implications.
Cumulonimbus clouds are often associated with bad weather, such as thunderstorms, heavy rain, and strong winds. These towering clouds can quickly develop and bring intense precipitation and severe weather conditions.
DEATH? Something bad is about to happen? Bad weather....
Cloudy skies and sudden strong winds. When the clouds are segregates in many different little islands its gonna rain for sure, studying the clouds patterns you can predict how long you have to wait until it start raining.
Nimbus clouds; they are usually a sign of heavy rains.
False. Clouds at different altitudes can indicate different weather conditions. For example, very high clouds like cirrus clouds may indicate fair weather, while lower, denser clouds like cumulonimbus clouds may signal the potential for storms.
red clouds.....?
That's not the way it works. Satellites photograph such atmospheric phenomena as cloud movement. Weather forecasters watch as the clouds move, generally from west to east although hurricane clouds move across the Atlantic from eas to west. As they see the weather approaching an area, they can PREDICT how the weather will be based on how fast it's moving. Just like you can see a car coming down the street at a steady rate of speed, you can predict how long it will take for the car to run you down. You get out of the way -- people take cover form bad weather.
The thin, wispy clouds you saw are Cirrus clouds and they are very high in the atmosphere and made of ice crystals. They normally indicate a change in the weather, and it is usually bad weather. This means that the low layered cloud you saw was either a stratus or cumulonimbus cloud which are both storm clouds. Cirrus clouds don't always predict storms, but that was probably what was happening.
The dark storm clouds foreshadowed the approaching bad weather.
frogs
Stratus clouds are generally associated with overcast skies and can bring drizzle or light rain. They do not necessarily indicate bad weather, but can be a precursor to potentially rainy conditions.
Altostratus clouds typically bring overcast or mostly cloudy skies. They are thin and gray clouds that can obscure the sun or moon, resulting in a diffused or filtered light. Altostratus clouds generally do not produce precipitation, but they may indicate that rain or snow is likely in the near future.