Sentence examples for stormy wind from inspiring English sources

The phrase "stormy wind" is correct and usable in written English.
You could use it when referring to a strong, gusty wind associated with a storm. For example, "The stormy wind whipped the flag so hard it tore in half."

Exact(3)

She took the little girl in her arms, and both flew upwards, all radiant and joyful, far, far above mortal ken, where there was neither cold, nor hunger, nor care to be found; where there was no rain, no snow, or stormy wind, but calm, sunny days the whole year round.

Viewers can almost feel the stormy wind as it bows the tree in the top left of the painting, or as it whips Boukman's shirt away from his body as stands, with one arm pointed towards the sky and another pointed forward as if in a charge.

(Psalms 69 34) Praise the LORD from earth's lands, seas and the deep; Fire and hail, snow and clouds; Stormy wind, fulfilling His word; Mountains and all hills; Fruit trees and all cedars; Beasts and all cattle; Creeping things and winged fowl; Kings of the earth and all peoples; Princes and all judges of the earth; Both young men and virgins; Old men and children.

Similar(57)

More oil-covered birds were expected to be found as the stormy winds continued.

Stormy winds and high tides threatened to push the spill into the lakes and wetland inlets of southeast Louisiana through the weekend and eastward to neighboring Mississippi and as far as the Florida Panhandle over the next five days.

The instability of the $563 million vessel, coupled with forecasts of stormy winds for this island off the Tuscan coast, raised fears that the 950-foot-long hull could slide into deeper water.

An overnight blast of unseasonable stormy winds in excess of 20 knots had stacked up formidable waves across the Hauraki Gulf race course, but the breeze was just one factor in the race committee's decision.

But now the horror begins: souls tossed this way and that on stormy winds, torn apart by a three-headed dog under endless rain, sunk in bogs, sunk in boiling pitch, sunk in shit, sunk in blistering tombs, sunk in solid ice.

Click here for more pictures of Isle of Wight festival goers in the mud The Met Office predicts stormy winds and rain over the weekend, with festival goers hoping there won't be a repeat of last year's torrential downpour, which turned car parks into mud baths.

At this the goddess was so angry that she sent stormy winds and prevented them from sailing.

Disc of the week - a new recording of Wagner's first great opera, the Flying Dutchman whose score is lashed by stormy winds and turbulent seas.

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