It depends on and/or in the area you are in. There could be no clouds but in a different area there could be bunches of clouds.
It would have to be in an very large area, where no water is present, and very dry humidity usually associated with a high pressure system. A perfect example of this would be a desert.
My husband and I were talking about the great Chicago fire. On the the Science channel, someone said that the fire took place during a clear sky; all people saw in the sky was the fire and the stars. My husband said the fire could not have been started by an ember blown from another house because there cannot be wind without clouds. I disagree.
Clearly this is a question for a meteorologist, but the evidence of our own eyes doesn't suggest clouds must be present to generate wind. Where I live, in Southern Queensland, Australia, I can watch the trees being ruffled by the wind under a clear blue sky; I doubt this phenomenon is peculiar to Australia.
No, on Earth the water cycle is always going. For there to be no clouds, there would have to be no sun. And if there was no sun, we wouldn't be here.
Also because the water cycle never stops.
No. In the event that there are no clouds nearby, it is possible that the snow has blown many miles from its parent cloud. Otherwise, it may be very fine snow blown from the surface or nearby objects (buildings, trees, etc.).
but...
At very cold temperatures, 40 below zero (C or F) and colder, snow can actually fall out of the cleanest, clearest blue sky without intervening clouds. Temperatures need not be so cold if there is dust, or other minute particles, in the air on which the water vapour may deposit. When condensation nuclei are present, diamond dust may form at temperatures just below minus 20oC (0 oF). At such temperatures, the water vapour in the air spontaneously forms ice crystals which slowly settle earthward. When these falling crystals are caught in the light, they sparkle like gemstones, a weather condition known appropriately enough as diamond dust.
It would be possible to have a day without any clouds if there was very little moisture in the air and no pressure differences.
In a high pressure, the air sinks and warms up, dissolving clouds.
on a shiny day
It would be some kind of eclipse.
I would say that if the clouds are grey it's going to rain, but if they are white then it will be a nice day!:)
its a cumulonimbus clouds that you see
Clouds move by the wind blowing them around. On a less windy day, clouds move slower, on a windy day, clouds move faster.
It depends on and/or in the area you are in. There could be no clouds but in a different area there could be bunches of clouds. It would have to be in an very large area, where no water is present, and very dry humidity usually associated with a high pressure system. A perfect example of this would be a desert.
A sunny day is a day without clouds and by association can also mean a happy day.
on a shiny day
Some types of cloud you might see on a nice sunny day are cumulus clouds or perhaps cirrus clouds..
dark
It would be some kind of eclipse.
I would say that if the clouds are grey it's going to rain, but if they are white then it will be a nice day!:)
Yes it is,if you are out on a hot sunny day,and clouds came,it would get cooler.
Deserts have few clouds and low humidities. These two factors would hold in day-time heating and keep nights warmer. However, without clouds and high humidity the heat from the day rapidly is radiated back into space once the sun sets.
It's not possible to grow your hair in one day. You would have to use some sort of fake hair.
cumulus clouds
rain clouds