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A Hail of Fire An inferno A blaze
Yes, hail can kill you, but it's very rare. If there is a hail storm, the length of the storm, size of hail, wind speed, and amount of shelter will effect deaths caused by hail. Hail incidents are very unlikely in the US due to wether patterns and more shelter, but are more common elsewhere. Besides human deaths, hail will kill many animals, especially livestock without shelter, and devastate farmer's crops.
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It can kill people or make the people hate the plce to leave and it is a sign of GOD'S JUDGEMENT!
Hail Hail the Celts Are Here was created in 1961.
The plagues can be found in Exodus chapters 7 - 12. The ten plagues were the following in this order: The Plague of Blood (the Nile changed to blood), The Plague of Frogs (a vast number of frogs came all over the land), The Plague of Gnats (gnats came on people and animals from the dust), The Plague of Flies (flies filled the houses of the Egyptians), The Plague of Livestock (all of the livestock belonging to the Egyptians died), The Plague of Boils (boils broke out on people and animals), The Plague of Hail (hail fell and lightening flashed throughout the land of Egypt and it was the worst storm in all the land of Egypt since it had become a nation), The Plague of Locusts (locusts invaded Egypt and cover all the ground until it was black and they devoured what the hail had not destroyed), The Plague of Darkness (total darkness covered the land for three days), and finally, The Plague on the Firstborn (The firstborn in every house that did not put the blood of a lamb on the door frames died).
The hail would pulvarise their crops into pulp. The hail was probably huge, too, because it wouldn't have been much of a plague if it was small. Also, the houses may not have been that great, so it could have damaged the houses, too. the hail would problably be huge it would have been more of a plague because it was small.
To eat the crops of the ancient egyptians so they would starve, mind this is just a story though. A religious icon in somes mind but the likelyhood of another plague is questionable due to recent advances in technology.Jewish answer:Jewish tradition (and the Torah) state that the plagues were real events. Remarkably, an ancient document (the Ipuwer papyrus) mentions "the river turned to blood" and other Biblical parallels.To answer the question, the locusts ate whatever vegetation had survived the plague of hail
It is the Hail-Fire. I don't think this question was meant to be taken seriously.
they can die.
A Hail of Fire An inferno A blaze
The second plague to hit Egypt was Frogs. The Hebrew word is Tz'fardaya.
1) Turning of water into blood. 2) The second was the frogs. 3) The third plague gnats. 4) The fourth was the plague of flies. 5) The fifth plague livestock diseased. 6) The sixth plague boils. 7) The seventh plague thunder and hail. 8) The eighth plague was locusts. 9) It was darkness for three days. 10) The death of the first born.
The only harmful thing I know about hail is that the cloud can produce huge drops of water that cools down on the way down (making hail) and if the hail contains huge clumps of ice they can damage about anything on the ground.
I assume that you are referring to the Ten Plagues in Exodus. In order, they are: 1) The plague of water turning into blood 2) The plague of frogs 3) The plague of gnats 4) The plague of flies 5) The plague of livestock death 6) The plague of sores 7) The plague of hail 8) The plague of locusts 9) The plague of darkness 10) The plague of first-born death
God sent ten plagues trying to prove Pharaoh (Rameses the second) that God is real and letting the Isrealites free from slavery. Seven days of blood, frogs, gnats, flies, death of the Egyptians' animals, boils (sores), hail, locusts, three days of darkness, and the firstborn of Egypt.
In jolly Rogers lagoon & in hail fire peaks