The rapid heating of air cause by nearby lightning, thus causing a loud sound we call thunder.
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.
Well, thunder doesn't actually produce lightning. Lightning produces thunder.
The abbreviation for Thunder is TH.
Thunder
Thunder
the thunder of a dinosaur's roar and the thunder of gunfire
I wanna go where the thunder wont roar
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.
Feel the Thunder, Hear the Roar!
roar, rumble, crash, boom
The thunder sound is like the roar of lion and the lightenting looks like the flashes of the camera.
There was an lion roar and it is very brave then the thunder ang lightning appears.
thunder roar thunderbolt crunch(if it can learn it)
mach punch hyper beam thunder roar of time
This song was recorded by the Jackson Southernaires on their CD/ album "Power Packed". The proper name of the song is "Thunder".
Electrike learns: Thunder Wave, Leer, Howl, Quick Attack, Spark, Odor Sleuth, Roar, Bite, Thunder, and Charge.
If there are many seconds between the flash of lightning and the roar of thunder, it indicates that the storm is far away. Each second of delay between seeing the lightning and hearing the thunder represents a distance of about 1 mile between you and the lightning strike.