A grey, miserable rain cloud.
When "nimbo" is added to a cloud term, such as "nimbostratus" or "cumulonimbus," it indicates that the cloud is capable of producing precipitation. "Nimbo" refers to rain or precipitation, so clouds with this prefix typically bring wet weather.
Nimbo
"Nimbo" is a combining form that indicates the presence of rain or precipitation (e.g., nimbostratus). "Nimbus" refers to a luminous cloud or halo that surrounds a supernatural being or a form of radiance encompassing something divine or sacred.
"Nimbo" is a prefix used in meteorology to refer to clouds that are associated with precipitation. It is derived from the Latin word "nimbus," which means rain cloud.
Clouds that have nimbo or nimbus in their names, like cumulonimbus (associated with thunderstorms).
When "nimbo" is added to a cloud term, such as "nimbostratus" or "cumulonimbus," it indicates that the cloud is capable of producing precipitation. "Nimbo" refers to rain or precipitation, so clouds with this prefix typically bring wet weather.
its called Nimbo. Like a Nimbo Stratus cloud.
What happens if "nimbo" appears at the beginning of a cloud name or "nimbus" appears at the end.
What happens if "nimbo" appears at the beginning of a cloud name or "nimbus" appears at the end.
Nimbo
Nimbus is a Latin word meaning cloud or rain storm. Nimbo is a prefix and nimbus is a suffix. An example would be: Nimbostratus, a precipitating cloud.
precipitation producing cloud
When the prefix "nimbo" is attached to another cloud type, it indicates that the cloud is producing precipitation. For example, nimbostratus clouds typically bring steady, widespread precipitation.
"Nimbo" is a combining form that indicates the presence of rain or precipitation (e.g., nimbostratus). "Nimbus" refers to a luminous cloud or halo that surrounds a supernatural being or a form of radiance encompassing something divine or sacred.
no
It got its name by combining the words nimbo and stratus. Stratus clouds are ones that form in layers, and look like they kind of 'blend in' with the sky. When you add the word nimbo to a cloud name, it means a dark rain cloud. Therefore, the nimbostrautus cloud is a dark, layered rain cloud.
Cloud is the English equivalent of 'nimbo'. The Latin word is a masculine gender noun. It's the singular form, in the ablative case, as the object of a preposition.