The term "rain cloud" is typically considered to be two words. "Rain" and "cloud" are separate words that are combined to describe a specific type of cloud that produces precipitation in the form of rain. In technical and scientific contexts, it is important to distinguish between the two components of the term for clarity and precision in communication.
Sort of. Rainforest is one word, not two.
Lifestyle, life style, or life-style. All can be used.
Yes, the term 'rain check' is a compound noun; a word made up of two or more words that form a word with it's own meaning.
no it is not an one word it is of two word
I think the word "ongoing" is only one word, but it has two syllables that are two separate words.
Raindrop, as in a drop of rain, is one word.
Yes, the word "rain" has two syllables: "rain" (1 syllable) and "ing" (1 syllable).
rainstrom is a two word ...bcoz its actually a "rain-strom..
It's a compound word, "rain" and "forest".
Sort of. Rainforest is one word, not two.
No. Rain comes from clouds, but the clouds do not sweat. Clouds are made of water droplets, ice crystals, or a combination of the two. Rain falls when ice crystals grow inside a cloud, melt, and fall to the ground.
"Calculus" This is one: Not a cloud formation as the others are. Two: Calculus is a type of mathematic word form.
The collision-coalescence theory is the one that governs the fall of rain from the top of a cumulonimbus cloud. This theory states that larger raindrops form when smaller droplets collide and merge together.
Rainforest is one word. :) it can also be two words <br> <br> <br> But on google drive/docs, when I type in "rain forest", it shows a red jagged line underneath it, which I know it means it is spelled incorrectly. :(
a dark cloud filled with electicity: associated with thunderstormsCumulonimbus is a type of tall clouds that are stacked like a mountain. Its names is a combination of the Latin words "cumulo" that means "heap" and "nimbus" that means rain-producing cloud.The term 'cumulonimbus' comes from the combination of two words in the original, classical Latin. The first part of the word, 'cumulo-', comes from the noun 'cumulus', which is 'a heap, mass, or pile'. The second part of the word, 'nimbus', refers to 'a cloud', and most particularly to 'a black rain cloud'. And the description is most accurate, and most appropriate, for the heaped-up rain clouds, or thunderheads, to which the term refers.The suffix "nimbus" or "nimbo" as a prefix for other cloud types means "rain." So you can tell that a Cumulonimbus looks like Cumulus with "nimbus" at the end. Cumulonimbus means a Cumulus rain cloud.
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.
Lifestyle, life style, or life-style. All can be used.