No, thunder is a noun like feel my THUNDER.
Thunder that is not wet
Thunder cannot kill, but lightning can.
The word 'thunder' is both a verb and a noun.Examples:When it began to thunder, we decided to go home. (verb)We heard the thunder but didn't see any lightening. (noun)
it means that they are so close that when it thunder it lightings
Alfred Moore
September 2, 1967
Mikolaj Kondakow, Thunder Bay, Canada
Thunder
A way of making a sound like thunder
No one invented voltage. It has always existed, as evidenced by thunder storms. Scientists have merely been able to describe how it is caused.
Yes, the noun thunder is a mass noun. Multiples of thunder are expressed as the object of a preposition (a lot of thunder, claps of thunder, rolls of thunder, etc.), or using an adjective (loud thunder, rumbling thunder, deafening thunder, etc.)
A thunder "slap" does not exist. A thunder "clap" does. A thunder clap is the term given to the sound thunder is and makes.
Nobody invented it but it was not hard to discover it. The first person to see a lightning strike would have discovered it as you see the bright light several seconds before you hear the thunder.
thunder leone
No, thunder is a noun like feel my THUNDER.
Thunder that is not wet