This sounds like a description of a thunderstorm. Thunderstorms are characterized by tall cumulonimbus clouds, heavy rainfall, thunder, and lightning. They can produce strong winds, hail, and occasionally tornadoes.
The sound of thunder can be recreated through various methods, including using recordings of actual thunder, mixing low-frequency sounds to simulate the rumbling effect, and employing sound design techniques such as layering and modulation to create a dynamic and realistic thunder sound. Special effects artists and sound designers may also use audio software and hardware to enhance and manipulate thunder sounds for films, TV shows, and other media projects.
This phrase is a figurative way to describe the loud sound of thunder during a storm. It conveys the idea that thunder is large and powerful, much like an angry giant, creating a dramatic image and emphasizing the intensity of the storm.
Thunder is created when lightning heats up the air around it quickly, causing the air to expand rapidly and create a shock wave. This shock wave is what we hear as thunder, which can sound loud and booming due to the rapid expansion and compression of the air.
You often hear thunder when you see lightning because lightning produces a sudden and rapid heating of the air around it, causing it to expand quickly. This rapid expansion creates a shock wave that we hear as thunder. The farther away you are from the lightning, the longer it takes for the sound to reach you.
because when they hit the ball it sounds like thunder
AKON's "The Rain"
roaring thunder in a stormy day and buildings falling during an earthquake.
That sounds more like Danish or Norwegian than Swedish. It means thunder.
A band that sounds like ac/dc somewhat is Thunder. Rhinobucket are like ac/dc too. they even had Simon Wright(who used to drum for ac/dc) in their lineup for a while.
Guns and cannons, the only sound the Aztecs would be familiar with that sounds somewhat like a gunshot is thunder.
oxygen blockage
first of all, learn how to spell. major* and secondly there isnt a difference. minor sounds like a major and a major sounds like a minor... and learn how to spell minor as well.
Thunder produces different sounds because of the varying distances from which the sound waves reach us, the way they reflect off of nearby objects such as buildings or mountains, and the amount of energy released by the lightning bolt causing the thunder. This results in a mix of rumbling, cracking, or rolling sounds that we perceive as thunder.
because our hearing range isnt as big
Thunder is not louder to dogs than it is to humans, but thunder is more frightening to dogs than it is to humans, because we humans know what thunder is, and dogs don't. To a dog, thunder sounds like the barking of some ridiculously large animal, which would of course be extremely dangerous, if it actually existed.
rumble