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.
Cumulonimbus clouds.
Hail comes from cumulonimbus clouds.
Cumulonimbus
A cumulonimbus cloud can produce heavy rainfall, lightning, thunder, and sometimes hail. They are associated with severe weather events such as thunderstorms, tornadoes, and heavy downpours.
Mount Kenya vomited. Katie Volcano cried as it leap out of the surface. Katie Volcano coughed Katie Cumulonimbus. Katie Cumulonimbus cried loudly. The angry lightning struck to the ground. Katie Tornado danced. Katie Tsunami raced towards Hong Kong. Katie Rainbow glanced. Katie Cumulonimbus pushed the sunlight away from Hong Kong. Katie Cumulonimbus swallowed Katie Cirrocumulonimbus as it flew. Katie Cumulonimbus slept over Hong Kong. Katie Acid Rain ignited the Ring of Fire. Katie Cumulonimbus ran across the Indian Ocean. Katie Cumulonimbus crept across South China Sea.
Cumulonimbus clouds.
cumulonimbus clouds
When the rain falls from the top of the cloud, since Cumulonimbus clouds are big the rain freezes up and turns into a ball of ice before it hits the ground.
Hail falls in relatively isolated regions under, yes, a cumulonimbus cloud. It can blow around somewhat so it is not always directly under it.
cumulonimbus cloud
There is no such thing as a cumulonimbus tornado. A cumulonimbus cloud is a ver large towering cloud. Most thunderstorms are cumulonimbus clouds, and some of the strongest of these storms are what produce tornadoes.
the clouds are cumulonimbus clouds
Cumulonimbus
Cumulonimbus are the clouds of thunderstorms.
No. Cumulonimbus clouds are what form thunderstorms.
A cumulonimbus cloud produces rain.
A cumulonimbus cloud produces rain.