Not trying to be funny but a bunch of gray clouds is probably all your going to see.
The five terms used to describe cloudiness are clear (0-10% cloud cover), partly cloudy (11-50% cloud cover), mostly cloudy (51-90% cloud cover), cloudy (91-100% cloud cover), and overcast (complete cloud cover).
When someone is said to be "falling from cloud 9," it means they are coming down from a state of extreme happiness or euphoria. It signifies a return to reality or a decrease in their positive emotions.
It's described as cold usually or that there will be bad weather.
Atmosphere, thermometer, gravity, rain, condensation, cumulus cloud, hurricane, humidity, transpiration, lightning, precipitation, meteorologist, tornado, rainbow, dew, fog, snow, wind, thunder, hail, drought, cirrus cloud, monsoon, barometer, nimbostratus cloud, temperature, and stratus cloud.
The weather term for how much of the sky is hidden by clouds is cloud cover. This is usually expressed in terms of a percentage, such as "partly cloudy" or "mostly cloudy," to indicate the amount of the sky covered by clouds.
On a gray, cloudy day with light rain falling, you would likely see nimbostratus clouds. These are thick, dark, and often cover the sky, bringing continuous precipitation like light rain or drizzle.
Cloudy Cloud Calculator was created on 1997-12-10.
The five terms used to describe cloudiness are clear (0-10% cloud cover), partly cloudy (11-50% cloud cover), mostly cloudy (51-90% cloud cover), cloudy (91-100% cloud cover), and overcast (complete cloud cover).
Cloudy Skys
rain cloud fluffy cloud dark cloud wispy cloud
no because it need more sun light than cloud/ In cloudy conditions, the light will become a limiting factor hence the amount of oxygen produced on a sunny day will be more than on a cloudy day.
no because it need more sun light than cloud/ In cloudy conditions, the light will become a limiting factor hence the amount of oxygen produced on a sunny day will be more than on a cloudy day.
Blur.
It is the same symbol as Partly Cloudy, a sun partly covered up by a cloud.
I think it is Cloud and Clout.
No it's two. Cloud-y.
Scott Hostle Jr