A solid has a definite shape and volume. A liquid has a definite volume, but takes the shape of its container. A gas lacks either a defined shape or volume . Plasma is similar to a gas in that its particles are very far apart, but a gas is electrically neutral and plasma has a charge.
Gas
Water can be a liquid. Like rain or in rivers, lakes and oceans. Snow and ice are solid water. Water can even be a gas. Water is found in a liquid state. This is because of the tiny, weak hydrogen bonds which, in their billions, hold water molecules together for small fractions of a second.
Plasma
This picture show building and those buildings are solid. It’s hard, stable and in shape not falling. They have solid, shell, and frame parts. For example, most buildings have a solid foundation. They also have a frame of wood or metal that supports a shell of brick or concrete.
Clouds appear when there is too much water vapour for the air to hold. The water vapour (gas) then condenses to form tiny water droplets (liquid), and it is the water that makes the cloud visible. These droplets are so small that they stay suspended in the air.
Lightning strikes create plasma via a very strong jolt of electricity. Most of the Sun, and other stars, is in a plasma state. Certain regions of Earth's atmosphere contain some plasma created primarily by ultraviolet radiation from the Sun.