rain and hail can fall at the same time because if the weather is cold enough it will freeze but it doesn't freeze every single drop so it hails and rains at the f***in same time
rain, snow, hail, lightning. most of this depends on where you live :)
Rain or if it freezes, hail.
Rain is a form of precipitation where droplets of water fall from clouds and reach the ground.
Rain, snow, sleet, and hail, Nature's elements set sail. Each unique, yet part of the same, Dancing together in a poetic, wild game.
Inside a cumulonimbus cloud, there are updrafts that carry water droplets to colder altitudes where they freeze into hailstones. These hailstones can grow as they move up and down in the cloud, eventually becoming heavy enough to fall to the ground as hail. At the same time, the cloud produces rain from the water droplets that don't freeze into hailstones and are too heavy to remain in the cloud.
Precipitation is;- Rain Sleet Snow Hail
rain, snow, hail, lightning. most of this depends on where you live :)
Sleet is heavier and worst then hail. Yes, and No! They are both frozen rain and they are both unpleasant. The main differences are the times of year they fall and the weather conditions that produce them.
rain: the clouds collect eough water from the ocean to the clouds and the clouds get too heavy and have to fall down. hail: the water from the clouds get frozen and turn into snow
Yes, the word 'hail' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'hail' is a word for pieces of ice that fall from clouds like rain, a word for a thing.Example uses:As the hail fell, it tore the leaves from the trees. (noun)My mother can tell from the look of the sky when it will hail. (verb)
Not at all. Rain is well...water. Hail is ice. It is much harder than snow and can get quite large.
Updrafts in cumulonimbus systems can cause some rain drops to rise up. They reach high altitudes where the temperatures are low enough for the droplet to freeze. They can then fall, collecting a layer of water on the outside, then rise again to form a larger hail stone. Eventually the hailstone is too large for the updraft to raise it. But away from the core of the updraft, the condensed raindrops can fall as normal rain.
The word you are looking for is 'hail'
Rain or if it freezes, hail.
A cumulonimbus cloud can produce rain or hail depending on the strength of updrafts within the cloud. If the updrafts are strong enough to carry water droplets high into the cloud where they freeze, hailstones may form. If the updrafts are not as strong, the water droplets will fall as rain.
Rain is a form of precipitation where droplets of water fall from clouds and reach the ground.
Rain, hail, snow and sleet can fall in most deserts.