The Beaufort Scale is widely used by sailors, there are 12 divisions of wind strength. See Wikipedia for 'Beaufort Scale'.
Local and prevailing wind
1.)Trade Winds Northeast Monsoon Oct.-Feb. Southwest Monsoon June-Sept.
A backdrift
The three types of wind cells are the polar cell, the Ferrel cell, and the Hadley cell. These are atmospheric circulation patterns that occur in each hemisphere and play a key role in redistributing heat around the Earth.
There are several types of winds, including global winds like the trade winds and westerlies, regional winds like sea breezes and mountain winds, and local winds like katabatic winds and chinook winds. Each type of wind is driven by specific atmospheric and geographical conditions.
Geostrophic wind:Gradient windCyclostrophic windLocal wind--------Katabatic and Anabatic windLand breez and sea breezFohn windvalley windThermal winds
Blizzards, characterized by strong winds and heavy snowfall, are common in the Midwest during winter. These storms can result in whiteout conditions and dangerous wind chills, impacting transportation and daily life in the region.
winds ex: northern winds southern winds eastern winds western winds
Tornadoes are capable of producing the fastest winds of any storm on earth, with the winds of the very strongest gusting to over 300 mph, as most structures will be completely destroyed by a 200 mph gust. Very few things can withstand such winds. This is, in simple terms, a result of a large pressure drop being concentrated into what is a very small area in weather terms, thus exerting a large amount of force on the air. Tornadoes with 300 mph winds are extremely rare, but winds of over 100 mph are not uncommon.
winds has 1 syllable -*winds-* clap it winds
Global winds are local winds.
1.synoptic winds 2.gradint winds 3.prevailing winds 4.geostrophic winds