language you use when you are writing or talking. no it is passive
A gustnado is a cyclonic ciculation that could cause severe thunderstorms.
Every gust of wind is individual, making you question impossible to answer.
Cyclone Olivia produced a record gust to 253 mph, the strongest surface-level wind gust ever recorded.
A very strong wind is called a gale.
Daybreeze is a gust of wind at night, while night breeze is the oposite. Nightbreeze is a night wind.
A blast is a violent gust, such as a gust of wind, an explosion, a loud, sudden sound, or an immature or undifferentiated cell.
There is no standard collective noun for wind. Nouns for winds are usually for a type of wind rather than a group of wind, for example a gust of wind or a gale of wind.
that a gust is strong and a breeze is a light wind.
A sudden stronger blast of wind.
A gustnado is a cyclonic ciculation that could cause severe thunderstorms.
"Gust"
No. A gust (of wind) is a noun, and there is a verb to gust. But the adjective form is gusty.
Yes, "a strong gust of wind roared" is an example of alliteration because the words "strong" and "gust" both start with the same "g" sound.
there is hurricane, gust, gale, cyclone and all like that
gust
gust
Gust can be a noun or a verb. An example sentence using gust as a noun is "A gust of wind caused a tree to fall on the power lines, making the whole street go dark." An example sentence using gust as a verb is "They said the wind could gust to 40 miles per hour, which could cause some damage."