¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Thunderstorms
1. thunderstorm [n] - See also: thunderstorm
Lexicographical Neighbors of Thunderstorms
Literary usage of Thunderstorms
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Climate and Weather of San Diego, California: Prepared Under the by Ford Ashman Carpenter, Willis Luther Moore (1913)
"thunderstorms and attendant weather phenomena have always been recorded and ...
thunderstorms, like all other kinds of weather, are caused by the great ..."
2. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"The great majority of the thunderstorms occur during the part of the day when
the ascensional movement of the air from the heated ground takes place, ..."
3. The Climate and Weather of San Diego, California: Prepared Under the by Ford Ashman Carpenter, Willis Luther Moore (1913)
"thunderstorms and attendant weather phenomena have always been recorded and ...
thunderstorms, like all other kinds of weather, are caused by the great ..."
4. The Climate and Weather of San Diego, California: Prepared Under the by Ford Ashman Carpenter, Willis Luther Moore (1913)
"thunderstorms and attendant weather phenomena have always been recorded and ...
thunderstorms, like all other kinds of weather, are caused by the great ..."
5. Meteorology, Weather, and Methods of Forecasting, Description of by Thomas Russell (1895)
"In middle latitudes thunderstorms are most frequent in summer and occur only
rarely in ... thunderstorms over Land and Sea. — Over the land the time of most ..."
6. The Principles of Aërography by Alexander McAdie (1917)
"The more humid the air and the more energetic the local convections the greater
the frequency and intensity of thunderstorms. The time of maximum frequency ..."
7. The Principles of Aërography by Alexander McAdie (1917)
"Conditions favorable to thunderstorms. The more humid the air and the more
energetic the local convections the greater the frequency and intensity of ..."