12 Verbs to Use for the Word thunderstorms

One evening there burst over London a fearful thunderstorm, and hearing a knock at my door, I opened it, to find a beautiful girl named Dorothy, the daughter of the housekeeper, standing there.

"When I was a kid," he said at last, "there came up a terrible thunderstorm.

I went towards the boulevards; I saw there a furnace; I heard there a thunderstorm.

R61830 ... Tupahn the thunderstorm.

I was sorry to find, that the tide did not at present rise sufficient to admit the large boats into the fresh water, so that getting a load would have been a very long operation, had it not been for a tremendous fall of rain that followed a thunderstorm, deluging every pool, and at once affording the means of filling the casks.

I hate thunderstorms.

" On June 23, he witnessed another thunderstorm from the Piazza of St. Mark: "The lightning, flashing in the dark clouds that were gathering from the Tyrolese Alps, portended another storm which soon burst over us and hastened the conclusion of the music.

The first blushed and owned that it was very welcome, as her wardrobe had never recovered a great thunderstorm at Oxford.

It had been late when Smeaton and I had got to Mr. Lindsey's, and the night was now fallen on the towna black, sultry night, with great clouds overhead that threatened a thunderstorm.

Darkness had just fallen, and there was that stifling oppression in the air that fore-tokened a thunderstorm.

IV Another night, just after moonrise, a wind arose and drove in front of it the whole night long a great thunderstorm, with lightnings and rollings and grumblings and mutterings, but never a spot of rain.

Before reaching the latter place, they encountered a terrific thunderstorm, in the midst of which they separated, and Byron's detachment lost its way for nine hours, during which he composed the verses to Florence, quoted above.

12 Verbs to Use for the Word  thunderstorms