you must be a tard if you are asking this question
From a few hundred to billions of dollars
thunderstorms, hail, tornadoes, hurricanes, floods, ice storms, windstorms, blizzards.
really? what are you an idiot?
yes
blizzards can be really strong and even cause some deaths
Blizzards effect people just like earthquakes do. Some sever blizzards can damage things and sometimes trap you inside your house. It can get really cold to and dangerous.
Blizzards can perhaps move non-living things, for example, rocks might move. Blizzards may also damage non-living things, for example, a house or a car. However, blizzards don't do major damage to non-living things.
Blizzards cause cars to be burying and people could lose their life power lines are often taken.Roofs could fall down.
Blizzards can perhaps move non-living things, for example, rocks might move. Blizzards may also damage non-living things, for example, a house or a car. However, blizzards don't do major damage to non-living things.
There are many such forms of weather that can cause property damage, death, or both. These include lightning, floods, tornadoes, strong winds, hurricanes, blizzards, large hail, ice storms, very hot weather, very cold weather.
Blizzards can cause damage directly in two ways and indirectly in many other ways: Blizzards have two components - cold (with the accompanying snow) and wind. The cold can damage anything susceptible to cold damage such as plants, animals, and structures. The wind can cause the same kind of damage that any wind can cause with or without snow - downed tree limbs, flying debris, shingles removed from roofs, etc. When combined with the cold and snow however, it makes the cold damage worse - the convective heat transfer will chill things quicker than a windless snowfall. The wind can also force snow through crevasses where it normally would not enter. With the subsequent thaw-freeze cycle, this can lead to ice-expansion damage. Blizzards can cause damage in the form of traffic accidents, people and animals getting lost due to limited visibility, piling snow up in drifts that cause damage by their weight, piling snow up in drifts that impede movement, drifts that hide dangerous drop offs and thin ice, limited visibility hiding obstacles that skiers and snowmobilers crash into, etc. etc.
Blizzards, tornadoes, and thunderstorms can all cause power outages by damaging or destroying power lines.