thunder
lightning
clap
storm
Nothing
Lightning is a group noun, and is both singular and plural. To identify specific lightning events, you can use words such as strike, flash, or bolt.
It depends on whether you're looking for one word, or a series of words you can string together. One of the interesting things about onomatopoeia is that if you do a good enough job with it, in a piece of writing, you'll never have to mention the word "thunder" even once, for people to know what you're talking about. "Rumble" is usually the single word I think of most often, associated with the sound of thunder. But there are lots of other words that bring to mind the sound of thunder. "Thunder" itself, for that matter, kind of sounds like thunder. Consider the following words: Percussion, doubled, redoubled, crashing, rolling, cascading, bomb, -- any word that has a "crashing" sound or an "explosive" sound could be evocative of thunder, in one's imagination. "Boom!" could be a one-word sound for thunder. If you are writing something, as a story or a poem, you can string a lot of "thundery" sounding words together, to get the idea across. The list above is not at all complete -- just an example of a few words that can bring the sound of thunder to mind.
Yes windup is a compound word. The words are wind and up.
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The Latin words for thunder and lightning are: Thunder = Tonitrus Lightning = Fulgoris, Fulgor Storm = Procella
Compound words for the noun thunder are:thunderstormthunderstruckthunderboltthunderclapthundercloud
Nothing
thunderstorm
Thunder and Lightning; in German, of course.
rain, storms, thunder, lightning, overcast
Most sources cite 3 or 4 possible answers, however, almost all sources claim these to be the fear of 'thunder and lightning' Astraphobia Brontophobia Ceraunophobia Keraunophobia The most likely way these are broken down, are with Brontophobia being the fear of thunder bronto is the latin prefix for thunder, Cerauno/Kerauno-phobia being the fear of thunder AND lightning - since Cerauno/Kerauno are used as latin words for thunder *and* lightning (or either, but it can be both). This leaves Astraphobia as the specific fear of lightning alone. However, the 3-4 words are used interchangably for fear of thunder and/or lightning, so you'll probably find you'd need to specifically state which you mean, no matter which of the words you use.
The storms cause because the rain and the clouds form together and then it causes the storm.
flet wood mac
"Donner" is thunder, "Blitz" is lightning, "Wolken" is clouds and"Regen" is rain.
Yes the word rainstorm is a compound word. The words are rain and storm.
yes seastorm... more are compound words are land-mark or down-cast