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Storm Very Common

Storm has 11 different meanings across 3 categories:

Noun · Verb · Proper Noun

Definitions
Noun
1

a violent weather condition with winds 64-72 knots (11 on the Beaufort scale) and precipitation and thunder and lightning

"The sudden onset of strong winds, heavy rain, and crackling thunder confirmed that a true storm had finally broken over the coastal town."

2

a violent commotion or disturbance

"the storms that had characterized their relationship had died away"

"it was only a tempest in a teapot"

3

a direct and violent assault on a stronghold

"The rebel forces launched a fierce storm against the castle gates at dawn, battering the wooden doors until they gave way."

4

Any disturbed state of the atmosphere, especially as affecting the earth's surface, and strongly implying destructive or unpleasant weather.

"The sudden storm knocked out power across the neighborhood and left trees scattered down the street."

In plain English: A storm is a period of bad weather with strong winds, rain, or thunder and lightning.

"The sudden storm forced everyone to run inside for shelter."

Usage: Use "storm" to describe severe weather conditions involving strong winds, rain, or snow that disrupt normal activities. It refers specifically to the natural atmospheric event itself rather than a metaphorical outburst of emotion unless clearly indicated by context.

Verb
1

behave violently, as if in state of a great anger

"After being yelled at for an hour, he stormed out of the room without saying another word."

2

take by force

"Storm the fort"

3

rain, hail, or snow hard and be very windy, often with thunder or lightning

"If it storms, we'll need shelter"

4

blow hard

"It was storming all night"

5

attack by storm; attack suddenly

"The sudden thunderstorm caught us off guard as we were walking home from work."

6

(weather it) be violent, with strong winds and usually rain, thunder, lightning, or snow.

"The sudden storm knocked out power across three counties last night."

In plain English: To storm means to move very quickly and angrily, often by shouting or running fast.

"The heavy rain began to storm against the windowpane."

Usage: Use "storm" as a verb to describe moving quickly and angrily through a place or attacking someone with forceful words. It conveys intense energy and turbulence rather than simply describing bad weather conditions.

Proper Noun
1

A unisex given name

"My friend named her daughter Storm because she was born during a thunderstorm, and I think it's such a strong unisex choice for a boy or girl."

Example Sentences
"The sudden storm forced everyone to run inside for shelter." noun
"A sudden storm rolled in and flooded the street within minutes." noun
"The storm damaged several trees near our house yesterday." noun
"We waited out the storm until it was safe to drive again." noun
"The heavy rain began to storm against the windowpane." verb
See Also
thunder rain lilith weather hurricane fume stormbound superstorm
Related Terms
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
atmospheric phenomenon disturbance assault act penetrate blow attack
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
firestorm northeaster hailstorm ice storm rainstorm blizzard thunderstorm windstorm

Origin

The word "storm" comes from Old English, where it originally meant a tempest, an attack, or a tumultuous rush of arrows. It traveled into modern English with its current meaning of heavy precipitation and disturbed weather conditions.

Rhyming Words
orm corm worm form norm gorm dorm feorm enorm reform e form afform byform efform v form unform urform enform deworm deform
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