How To Use Windstorm In A Sentence

  • It is clear from historical documents and radial growth chronologies that the logging and windstorms that created stands of Castanea dentata and Betula, also released shade tolerant Tsuga canadensis into the canopy.
  • I drove home with the windows down, the AC blasting, and a knot in my gut the windstorm in the car couldn't blow away. THE HUNDREDTH MAN
  • He enjoys the experience of being in the center of the windstorm for it is the only calm part of the tempest.
  • Egypt: periodic droughts; frequent earthquakes, flash floods, landslides, volcanic activity; hot, driving windstorm called khamsin occurs in spring; dust storms, sandstorms The 2001 CIA World Factbook
  • The largest dominant position of windstorm image sound depends on channel.
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  • Extreme precipitation events have increased by up to 4 per cent at high and mid-latitudes during the second half of the twentieth century, and more rainstorms, floods, and windstorms are forecast.
  • Ice storms occur in southern Canada and in the United States each year and, with a return time of 20-100 years, ice storms are more frequent than fires or windstorms in the deciduous forests of eastern Canada.
  • The real treasure, though, is the aforementioned "Windstorm," a percolating summer concoction with a hooklike gull's cry. Album review: School of Seven Bells, "Disconnect From Desire"
  • While all natural disasters can bring destruction to an area, windstorms typically produce the most damage.
  • There is no cause for concern,[sentence dictionary] for the windstorm was not too serious.
  • He enjoys the experience of being in the center of the windstorm for it is the only calm part of the tempest.
  • The 1850 event corresponds with the date of two intense windstorms and was the only disturbance event large enough to recruit white pine.
  • Natural hazards: periodic droughts; frequent earthquakes, flash floods, landslides; hot, driving windstorm called khamsin occurs in spring; dust storms, sandstorms Egypt
  • Besides genetics, factors that keep most eastern old growth from soaring to the skies are thin, rocky soils and frequent hurricanes, windstorms, and ice storms.
  • Then a bad windstorm removed his head and a Styrofoam replacement was added to create an equine beast.
  • When the tower came down, it brought fearsome rolling thunder and a windstorm carrying concrete and steel.
  • Egypt periodic droughts; frequent earthquakes, flash floods, landslides; hot, driving windstorm called khamsin occurs in spring; dust storms, sandstorms The 2005 CIA World Factbook
  • A windstorm in Washington is causing power outages throughout the region.
  • Weather patterns are disrupted and clouds, rain and windstorms are common reactions to the eclipse cycle, especially in the few days preceding an eclipse.
  • Hurricane and other windstorm insurance varies by state and sometimes by county.
  • Rain storms and windstorms and turbulent waves and whatever other kind of disaster existed had thrown itself at them.
  • Unfortunately this was a day of a huge windstorm, cold gusts to sixty knots or so, so the outdoor activities we'd planned--- aerial tram, petroglyph trail--- had to be canceled in favor of things we could do indoors. Coffee Bread
  • No matter how good your hay is today, between now and feeding time, every rain, every windstorm, is going to steal nutrients from every exposed bale and stack.
  • In May of 2003, severe straight-line windstorms struck the region, creating many small and a few large gaps.
  • On the way, a great windstorm causes a shipwreck and a lone sailor is found on the ‘Island of the Soul.’
  • High on everyone's list of ominous prospects is the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, in northern Minnesota, where a freak windstorm last summer turned half a million acres of trees into a massive pile of kindling.
  • She broke down then, hiding her face in her napkin, shaking like a poplar in a windstorm. SOMETHING IN THE WATER
  • While shopping in New York City, our discontented housewife gets caught in a furious windstorm.
  • Indeed, two major windstorms that came through central Pennsylvania in quick succession appear to be the most likely explanation for the major releases that occurred around 1850.
  • Meanwhile, extreme weather events are escalating: African floods, European windstorms, Asian droughts, and so on.
  • A freak straight-line windstorm caused a massive blowdown of trees in the area in 1999, and the profusion of fallen timber raised fears of a catastrophic firestorm.
  • The informants reported decreased yields owing to more pests, declining soil fertility, and the increased frequency of frosts, dry spells, and windstorms.
  • When ‘climate change’ is referred to in the press, it normally means greenhouse warming, which, it is predicted, will cause flooding, severe windstorms, and killer heat waves.
  • No matter how good your hay is today, between now and feeding time, every rain, every windstorm, is going to steal nutrients from every exposed bale and stack.
  • Natural hazards: periodic droughts; frequent earthquakes, flash floods, landslides, volcanic activity; hot, driving windstorm called khamsin occurs in spring; dust storms, sandstorms The 2001 CIA World Factbook
  • Also, windstorms from Gulf Coastal storms do induce significant damage in forests even farther inland than these mountain stands.
  • The very next day, a freak summer windstorm clogged the water flow with leaves, flooding the flanking fields in London's Hyde Park.
  • Then a bad windstorm removed his head and a Styrofoam replacement was added to create an equine beast.
  • Egypt is susceptible to periodic droughts; frequent earthquakes, flash floods, landslides; hot, driving windstorm called khamsin occurs in spring; dust storms, and sandstorms. Egypt
  • Egyptperiodic droughts; frequent earthquakes, flash floods, landslides; hot, driving windstorm called khamsin occurs in spring; dust storms, sandstorms Natural hazards
  • Along with windstorms and fire, beavers (Castor canadensis Kuhl) were major agents responsible for disturbance in eastern North America.
  • Infection with mycotoxins is most common on grains damaged by insects, birds, mites, hail, early frost, heat and drought stress, windstorms, and other unfavorable weather.

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