"...sheathed over in a gleam of pebbly skin..."
In "A Sound of Thunder" by Ray Bradbury, alliteration can be seen in phrases like "a sound, like a gigantic bonfire burning all of Time," where the repetition of the "b" sound creates a sense of intensity and foreshadows the chaos that follows. These alliterative moments are used to emphasize key themes and create a sense of rhythm in the narrative.
In "A Sound of Thunder," Bradbury implies that technology and messing with time are dangerous things and should not be taken lightly. How about "Everything Matters?" There are several implications in the Ray Bradbury story "Sound of Thunder" . One message may be that everything we do matters. In the story the hunters were told "they must not step off the path." When the sound of thunder scared him and he stepped off the path he killed a butterfly. When the hunter went back to the future everything had changed all as a result of one action. He asked to go back but it was too late. dlb
Thunder is a sound. As with all sound it can be absorbed by the physical surrounding such as the landscape etc
It really depends on the thunder. A tremor or volcanic eruption can sound like distant thunder. The thunder of a close by lightning strike can sound like a bomb or grenade.
It travels because of:The boom efect and what it does and how sound travels.
Strictly speaking thunder doesn't make a sound. Thunder IS the sound made by lightning. Thunder is always proceeded by lightning and the sound is literally the sound of the bolt of lightning ripping through the air at an incredible speed ionising the air, rapidly raising temperature, breaking the sound barrier and physically hitting the earth. The sound can be described as a rumble, a screech, a boom or a crack depending upon your proximity to the lightning and its type.
not if you are standing far enough away and not at all the sound of the lightning is thunder but if you were standing directly underneath it the sound would come at the exact moment of the light
no not at all, thunder is the sound made by lightening
Lightning can strike houses during a thunderstorm, but thunder itself is simply the sound produced by the rapid expansion and contraction of air surrounding a lightning bolt. It is not the lightning strike itself, so thunder does not directly hit houses.
thunder and lighting is made when clouds are rubbing together which is causing friction. when its causing friection its moves and makes a spark. when it sparks all atoms (and protons) are going tot he ground which is very bad....
All similes are metaphors but not all metaphors are similes.A metaphor is a comparison between two or more dissimilar things. Similes are too, however similes do so by making the comparison using the words like or as.
Lightning heats up the air and the heated expanding air causes the thunder sound. You can estimate how far away the lightening was by counting seconds after the flash, 6 seconds to a mile away.thunder is the sound of lightning after the lightning strike occurs