The word meaning "calamity" is spelt as you have done in the question.
Disaster.
The correct spelling of the word is victim (individual affected by crime, disaster, or mishap).
There are 5 or 6 major dictionary entries for the word spell.NOUN- a supernatural or magical enchantment, or invocation* (e.g. love spell)- an unspecified period of time (e.g. dry spell)- (related) a brief occurrence (e.g. dizzy spell)VERB- to indicate the letters in a word (e.g. spelling bee)- to relieve or take a turn (e.g. to spell another laborer)- to signify or bring about (e.g. this spells disaster for our plans)*Metaphorically, a location or activity may also enchant or attract (e.g. falling under the spell of a woman, or of the spell of the opera).
a disaster affecting the whole nation
pronouns are words standing in for nouns. I would say 'it' for 'disaster'.When the disaster struck, it cost many people their lives.
Disaster.
The word for a cataclysm or calamity is "disaster".
The anagram is disaster.
Disaster, disaster, disaster. Write it three times, then you'll know how to spell it. Once you know how to spell it, you'll get all the answers you want with a simple web search. Repeat after me: D-I-S-A-S-T-E-R
typhoon
Disaster, disaster, disaster. Write it three times, then you'll know how to spell it. Once you know how to spell it, you'll get all the answers you want with a simple web search. Repeat after me: D-I-S-A-S-T-E-R
Yes but only if you rearrange the "strom" to spell "storm".
The word sought may be "calamity" (bad luck, or a disaster).
You spelled it correctly, catastrophe (calamity, disaster).
The correct spelling is apocalypse (disaster, catastrophe).If capitalized Apocalypse, refers to the Biblical end of the world.
The word sought may be:disasters - (plural noun) calamities or natural cataclysmsdisastrous - (adjective) from, of, or like a disaster; awful
No, it is not, simply because it is virtually impossible to prove that some disaster was caused by some person casting a spell.