at a warm front after it has past it would be cloudy weather and warm air
during the front there will be cirrus and stratus clouds
during a cold front there will be cumulonibus clouds
and after it has passed it will be clear and colder
stationary there will be lots of rain
and occludded there will be cumulonimbus clouds
and the weather will change for both those depending on what front gets more power
There's also occluded fronts and stationary fronts, but they are slightly less important--so yes. Kind of.
in between or around or near air masss or where they meet.
They all consist of two or more fronts colliding into each other.
The question would be better phrased as why do blizzards occur at fronts. A weather front is a natural phenomenon and often occurs where air masses differ in moisture and temperature. A storm front with rain has warmer temps at higher elevations than a storm front with hail. A storm front at cold temperatures can bring dry snow, wet snow, sleet (icy rain), ice, or a blizzard-- and what occurs depends on the moisture and temperature. A blizzard may arise where two fronts merge, collide, or interact, and how fast the fronts "move". A fast moving front dumps less rain or snow than a front that is slow-moving or stalled.
The boundary between two air masses is known as a Front. There are four types of fronts, warm fronts, cold fronts, stationary fronts, and occluded fronts. See the link for characteristics of each.
when two air masses meets at fronts,cyclonic rain occurs.
Thunderstorms goes with cold fronts and stationery fronts. Warm fronts usually bring moisture into the area.
Evaporation occurs at different temperatures for different substances. Evaporation is just the change of state of matter from liquid to gaseous.
The Eastern and the Western Fronts.
There were actually three fronts in World War Two. The Pacific, European, and North African fronts.
they are both fronts
Germany was attempting to avoid a war on two fronts.
There's also occluded fronts and stationary fronts, but they are slightly less important--so yes. Kind of.
in between or around or near air masss or where they meet.
the fronts keep in touch
Because they fought on multiple fronts.
Because they fought on multiple fronts.