Tormenta, tempestad
It means: there is a storm
"Storm" in Spanish is "tormenta." It is pronounced, "tore-MEN-tah." Sites such as learn-spanish.co.il provide audio pronunciations of many common Spanish words.
Storm is 'orage' (masc.) in French.
biggest word in spanish
The word "air" in spanish is aire hope that helped!
The word hurricane is probably derived from the Taino word huracan which meant storm. The Spaniards that landed in Hispaniola heard this word used by the Arawak people that lived here. They adopted this word into the Spanish language where huracan has the meaning of hurricane.
First of all, referencing the term used in the question, the correct modern-day spelling is 'hurricane.' Two 'Rs.''The word 'hurricane' has its etymological genesis in mid-16th century Spanish, as 'Taino hurakán' or as literally translated: "god of the storm."
It means: there is a storm
"Storm" in Spanish is "tormenta." It is pronounced, "tore-MEN-tah." Sites such as learn-spanish.co.il provide audio pronunciations of many common Spanish words.
Sorm is not a word. You likely are thinking of the word 'storm', which can include rain storm, ice storm, thunderstorm, dust storm, etc.
Storm
I believe you mean "tormenta", which is "storm" in Spanish.
Storm
A storm is coming in.
Dutch: storm [pron. storem"] Indonesian: angin badai French: tempete German: Sturm
awha, heihei, tupuhi.
storm = סערה (seˁara)