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[ US /ˈstɔɹmi/ ]
[ UK /stˈɔːmi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. characterized by violent emotions or behavior
    a stormy marriage
    a stormy argument
  2. (especially of weather) affected or characterized by storms or commotion
    a stormy day
    wide and stormy seas

How To Use stormy In A Sentence

  • It was a stormy meeting. Paul VI - The First Modern Pope
  • But why is this winter so stormy? Times, Sunday Times
  • There were mussels and abalones and clams and rock-oysters, and great ocean-crabs that were thrown upon the beaches in stormy weather. CHAPTER XVIII
  • It had been a night of stormy weather, with torrential rain and high winds.
  • It had been a night of stormy weather, with torrential rain and high winds.
  • But the more the morselling of Christianity went on, the more dangerous became the raging ocean around it, so that now the Christian Archipelago seems to be quite covered with the stormy waves. The Agony of the Church (1917)
  • I met Erma Lee, a chestnut two-year-old filly, by Stormy Atlantic, that had yet to run. Liz O'Connell: Proviso: Always on Track
  • It was the beginning of a stormy relationship. PHYLLOXERA: How Wine was Saved for the World
  • It's a typically riotous mix of oompah music-hall cavortings, slurred-pitch Middle Eastern rhapsodising, luxuriously sensuous clarinet love-songs, and stormy collective blasts reminiscent of the 1960s John Coltrane quartet. Gilad Atzmon Orient House Ensemble: The Tide Has Changed
  • The convoy itself encountered numerous difficulties; mechanical and logistical problems were compounded by stormy clashes of personality.
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