Thunder as a noun is a sound produced by lightning, so it normally has no plural form. Occurrences at two separate times or places would remain "thunder."
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 is a noun, not a verb. You do not say "it was thundering earlier" you say "there was thunder earlier".
A peal of thunder
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
The collective noun for thunder that starts with the letter "c" is "clap." In meteorology, a clap of thunder refers to the sound produced by the rapid expansion of air surrounding a lightning bolt. Thunder is created when lightning heats the air, causing it to rapidly expand and create a shock wave that we hear as thunder.
Jazz, Magic, Heat and Thunder
The noun 'thunder' is a mass noun (an uncountable noun), a word that has no plural form.Mass nouns are expressed using amounts or measures called partitive nouns; for example, a clap of thunder or peals of thunder.The word 'thunder' is also a verb: thunder, thunders, thundering, thundered.
The word gods is a plural common noun. It is not a proper noun.The gods were angry.If gods has ownership or belongings, it needs an apostrophe.The gods' wrath was shown in thunder and lightning.
It depends on which word's connotation best fits the speaker's tone of story that the phrase is in. Use either, but be aware that they are both trite expressions. Think of a surprising [like thunder] way of saying it. How about a shock of thunder, or a grab of thunder? Or punch, fit, stun, ...And you should consider what the phrase is actually describing - some thunder is very much like a low rumbling roar while other thunder is like a the abrupt boom of a cannon going off just overhead. ___ A clap of thunder is one single bang, a roar is longer. A grab of thunder is, with respect, a no-no. It is neither trite nor creative ... However, roar of thunderalways calls to mind the comically trite German nationalist song 'The Watch on the Rhine' which begins (in English translation): A mighty [or mighteous] roar ascends like thunder! It is pure kitsch.
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