When hail falls, you need to find shelter as soon possible.
Hail is frozen precipitation that forms in thunderstorms, while snow forms in colder clouds. Hail and snow are not the same; hail typically forms in warmer conditions than snow. Once hail falls to the ground, it remains as hail and does not turn into snow.
gravity pulling it down. When water droplets in a cloud are carried upward due to strong air currents, they freeze into ice pellets. As they become heavier, they eventually fall to the ground as hail.
Depending on the temperature and other conditions, it could be rain, snow or hail. But if the question is about what falls from cumulonimbus that most likely wouldn't fall from other cloud formations, then the answer would be hail. It's the vertical activity that gives the cumulonimbus cloud its distinctive shape, and it's the vertical activity that forms hail...especially large hail stones.
Precipitation
Cumulonimbus clouds.
Hail can have many meanings, such as "hailing" a taxi, "hail" that falls from the sky, "hail" as in "greet," etc. Though I'm not sure which context you're referring to, the hail that falls from the sky is 'arare.' "Hail" as in "Hail to the king!" is 'banzai.' "Hail" as in "greet" can be 'aisatsu suru.'
Yes, hail falls in Maryland, but not as often as in Oklahoma.
The homonym for "hale" is "hail." "Hail" can refer to frozen rain that falls in pellets or an expression of greeting.
No, hail doesn't fall in tornadoes, but it often falls near them.
It falls as precipitation, such as rain, or hail.
It is called hail
It can. Hail often does come before a tornado, but most storms that produce hail do not produce tornadoes.
Precipitation
When hail falls from clouds, it is called a hailstorm or hail shower. Hail is formed when updrafts in thunderstorms carry raindrops upward into extremely cold areas of the atmosphere, where they freeze into ice pellets before falling back to the ground.
it can form into hail, snowflakes, etc.........it can take the form of rain,snow,hail..
Hail is frozen precipitation that forms in thunderstorms, while snow forms in colder clouds. Hail and snow are not the same; hail typically forms in warmer conditions than snow. Once hail falls to the ground, it remains as hail and does not turn into snow.
No, hail and hell are not homophones. Hail is frozen precipitation that falls from the sky, while hell refers to a place of punishment or torment in some religious beliefs.