C'è il tuono is an Italian equivalent of 'There is thunder'. The phrase in Italian is pronounced 'cheh eel TWOH-noh'. The letters 'c'è' are formed from the combination of the demonstrative 'ce' and the verb 'è' to mean 'there's, there is'. The masculine definite article 'il'means 'the'. The masculine gender noun 'tuono' means 'thunder'.
"Boom, rumble, thunder" as a noun and "I blast/boom/thunder" as a verb are English equivalents of the Italian word tuono.Specifically, the Italian word can be a masculine noun which means "boom, rumble, thunder." Or it may be a verb in the first person singular present indicative which means "(I) am blasting/booming/thundering, (I) blast/boom/thunder, (I) do blast/boom/thunder." Either way, the pronunciation always will be the same: "TWOH-noh."
"TWO-no" is the pronunciation of the Italian word tuono. The word in question serves as the first person singular of the present indicative or as a masculine singular noun. The translation will be "I shout (am shouting, do shout)" in the first case and "thunder" in the second.
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.)
thunder leone
The sound caused by the rapid expansion of air along an electrical strike is thunder. Lightning heats the air rapidly, causing it to expand quickly, which creates a shock wave that we hear as thunder.
thunder gale force wall, thunder king tearing blast, thunder wild wind fang dance, and 100 thunder fang dance
thunder gale force wall, thunder king tearing blast, thunder wild wind fang dance, and 100 thunder fang dance
the thunder of a dinosaur's roar and the thunder of gunfire
Ratiweras means thunder in Mohawk
Thunder = Tonitrus
thunder Thunder.
The Iron and the thunder