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Severe storms pass through southern parts of North Texas; thunderstorm watch trimmed

Most of Dallas-Fort Worth was in the clear.

Update (7 p.m.) Isolated but potentially severe storms were passing through southern parts of North Texas on Sunday evening, but most of Dallas-Fort Worth remained in the clear and a thunderstorm watch had been reduced.

The watch remained in effect for Dallas, Collin and Ellis counties, as well as counties further southeast of Dallas-Fort Worth, though more storms were unlikely.

The heaviest of the storms passed through Bosque and Hill counties, where a tornado warning had been issued until 6:30 p.m.

The warning was changed to a severe thunderstorm warning until 7:30 p.m. Navarro County was also included on the thunderstorm warning.

Hail up to the size of baseballs, heavy rain and strong wind gusts were the primary threats with the storm.

Storms began to form about 6 p.m. in southern Dallas County but they were not severe.

Cool shot! Anvil from severe storm near Hillsboro about 50mi away from our Fort Worth tower cam. #wfaaweather pic.twitter.com/HyDKB3IMqd

After 7 p.m. storms will generally be east of DFW and continue moving east into East Texas during the late evening and overnight hours. Rain and storm chances decrease overnight with a dry forecast by Monday morning. Monday will be mostly sunny, a little cooler, and windy.

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