No, thunder is a noun like feel my THUNDER.
Yes, "thunderclap" is a compound word. It is made up of the words "thunder" and "clap" combined to create a single word.
The noun thunder is a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a thing.
Compound nouns for the noun thunder are:thunderstormthunderboltthunderclapthundercloud
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 'thunder' is both a verb and a noun.Examples:When it began to thunder, we decided to go home. (verb)We heard the thunder but didn't see any lightening. (noun)
Adjective.-The word THUNDER is a Noun as its a name of an entity - Thundering becomes a intransitive verb as it is an action.
In Apache, the word for thunder is "bilasáana."
The Igbo word for "thunder" of the Western African origin is egbe igwe.
The Tagalog word for thunder is "kidlat."
Thunder = Tonitrus
The African Luhya equivalent for the English word 'thunder' is "Likulu".
A peal of thunder
Kulog. Kidlat is for lightning
The Indian word for thunder is "Garjana" in Hindi and "Yakshagana" in Kannada.
"Toirneach" is the Irish word for "thunder".
The noun thunder is a common, concrete, non-count noun, a word for a sound, a thing. The word thunder is also a verb (thunder, thunders, thundering, thundered).
No. Thunder is simply thunder. Twister is another word for a tornado.