its a simile
some of the vocabulary words for tornadoes are tornado, dry line, fujita scale, funnel cloud
The zig zag line is not made by thunder but by lightning. It finds the easiest path from the cloud to earth or to another cloud and this is not always straight, it would seem. The noise of thunder is made by the air, which gets heated a lot by the lightning and expands, collapsing in again rapidly after the strike.
Cumulonimbus clouds, those can cause supercell storms (rotating thunderstorms) and then severe weather, such as deadly lightning, tornadoes, large hail, straight line winds, and even flooding.Another cloud is Mammatus. Mammatus hangs beneath the anvil of a mature thunder cloud. It produces severe weather especially tornadoes. I read this from a book so this is true.
Depends on how you define a tornado. If your definition is a swirling mess of dust and ground debris, then yes. But a true tornado is attached to the cloud base in the updraft section of a storm. A gust front is an outflow of cold air from the downdraft part of the storm. Associated with a Gust front is low, fast-moving clouds and extreme straight-line winds. In a gust-front, the clouds are usually not attached to the cloud base. Due to the straight line winds, debris can be picked off the ground and spin in the air. These are called gust-nadoes. These gust-nadoes are usually quite weak like you said, but are not classified as actual tornadoes. These gust-nadoes are about as equivalent to a dust devil found in dry regions, or other wind caused swirls.
Lighting is electricity, and the charge follows the path of least resistance to "ground" and that would be a line sometimes zig-zaging along the before mentioned path of least resistance to the ground or other cloud with an oposing charge. that is why hills, and other raised structures are struck more frequently than flat ground, this provides the charge a quicker route to ground.
I Wandered Lonely As A Cloud - William Wordsworth.
The poem "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" by William Wordsworth has 4 lines.
The opening line "I wandered lonely as a cloud" belongs to the poem "Daffodils" by William Wordsworth. It is not the opening line of any other famous poem.
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I wandered lonely as a cloud by William WordsWorth
It is an example of a simile. Similes are a type of figurative language that makes a comparison using the words "like" or "as."
In "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud," one example of personification is in the line "The daffodils danced beside the lake." Here, the daffodils are given human-like qualities of dancing. Another example is in the line "The waves beside them danced," where the waves are also personified as dancing.
In Wordsworth's poem "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud," he describes being alone in nature and stumbling upon a field of daffodils, which brings him joy and a sense of inner peace. The sight of the dancing daffodils fills him with a sense of happiness and spiritual connection, making him feel less lonely and appreciative of the beauty of the natural world. The daffodils symbolize the ability of nature to bring solace and joy to the soul, even when one is feeling alone or isolated.
Sure! To be or not to be By the dawn's early light I wandered lonely as a cloud Shall I compare thee to a summer's day The road not taken
polka dots!
"You Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" is a nature poem because it describes the beauty of nature, particularly the sight of daffodils in the countryside. The poet connects the natural scene to emotions and human experiences, emphasizing the tranquility and joy found in nature. The imagery and language used in the poem evoke a sense of the natural world's power and influence on human emotions.
'ABABCC' describes the rhyme structure of a poem. Corresponding letters signal the rhyming words, for example in William Wordsworth's poem I wandered lonely as a cloud, the first stanza shows this ABABCC structure:I wandered lonely as a cloud (A)That floats on high o'er vales and hills, (B)When all at once I saw a crowd, (A)A host, of golden daffodils; (B)Beside the lake, beneath the trees, (C)Fluttering and dancing in the breeze. (C)A - cloud rhymes with crowdB - hills rhymes with daffodilsC - trees rhymes with breeze