Hurricanes
in sentence
171 examples of Hurricanes in a sentence
It's still heavy now, and it was heavy before that, but when you flipped open a newspaper, when you turned on the TV, it was about ice caps melting, wars going on around the world, earthquakes,
hurricanes
and an economy that was wobbling on the brink of collapse, and then eventually did collapse, and so many of us losing our homes, or our jobs, or our retirements, or our livelihoods.
High-ranking males provide an enormous amount of comfort in the group, and they go to places where there are earthquakes or
hurricanes
and they provide comfort.
My point is that I'm writing another one now, and I'll write another book after that and another and another and another and many of them will fail, and some of them might succeed, but I will always be safe from the random
hurricanes
of outcome as long as I never forget where I rightfully live.
Wild women have
hurricanes
in their bellies, releasing a flood of a lesson.
It'll turn out to be another emergent phenomenon like traffic jams, like hurricanes, like life, and we'll figure it out.
This image shows those paths, all the
hurricanes
that have been recorded.
You can see that, in the red square, there hardly are any
hurricanes.
It would lead to changing deserts, changing rivers, changing patterns of hurricanes, changing sea levels, hundreds of millions of people, perhaps billions of people who would have to move, and if we've learned anything from history, that means severe and extended conflict.
Meteorologists and environmental scientists show the growth of major
hurricanes
and the recession over the years of many of the world's glaciers.
My friend Heidi Cullen said that if we gave droughts names the way we give
hurricanes
names, we'd call the one in the southeast now Katrina, and we would say it's headed toward Atlanta.
Unlike earthquakes,
hurricanes
or volcanic eruptions, an asteroid impact can be precisely predicted and prevented.
We have sailed into Atlantic
hurricanes.
And beyond fish, the oceans affect all of us daily as they drive global weather systems, which affect things like global agricultural output or can lead to devastating destruction of lives and property through hurricanes, extreme heat and floods.
Similar to protecting yourself from tornadoes or hurricanes, getting and staying inside a sturdy building would offer protection from the explosion’s shockwave, heat, and radiation.
So we prepare for hurricanes, right?
That would include more efficient wind farms; the ability to better prepare for catastrophic weather events; or even the power to manipulate
hurricanes
away.
When people with lots of resources and good forecasts don't prepare for deadly hurricanes, they're often failing to imagine how dangerous they can be.
And in the same way that global wind patterns here on Earth can be affected by hurricanes, the solar wind is sometimes affected by solar storms that I like to call "space hurricanes."
We know that
hurricanes
have always happened in the past."
Too bad all
hurricanes
aren't like this one, it would surely help our homeowners insurance rates here in the Sunshine State.
It had wooden acting, terrible script from pieces from the Bible like hurricanes, tidal waves and earthquakes.
When you get so many
hurricanes
in one year that you run out of names, there's something going on.
This year alone, back-to-back
hurricanes
have devastated Caribbean islands, monsoon flooding has displaced tens of millions in South Asia, and fires have raged on nearly every continent.
Data have also tied the severity of
hurricanes
in the southern US to warmer waters in the Gulf of Mexico.
Why did thousands die in Haiti during the recent
hurricanes
and not in Florida?
In Haiti, which still suffers from underdevelopment, political turmoil, and the effects of destructive hurricanes, Ban appointed former US President Bill Clinton as his Special Representative to help deal with the country’s plight.
We did so this year in Haiti and other Caribbean nations hit by
hurricanes.
In November, The Christian Science Monitor focused on the IPCC’s findings on hurricanes, the strength and frequency of which have been linked to global warming ever since former US Vice President Al Gore’s film An Inconvenient Truth made media hay out of Hurricane Katrina.
Yet, while the IPCC suggests that hurricanes’ maximum wind speeds will most likely increase, it also predicts that the total number of tropical
hurricanes
may fall, and that extra-tropical
hurricanes
will most likely decline in frequency, too.
The IPCC clearly states that hurricane-damage costs have increased steadily because more people, with more expensive property, now live where
hurricanes
strike.
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