"Descriptive about hurricane" Essays and Research Papers

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    Descriptive Essay

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    after I find meaning of the vocabulary and I had to read it again. And in the book‚ I lose the story in my head at some point. Because of this‚ I started to hate reading something and have hesitation to read and write something about English. And I had a kind of trauma about English. I started to have

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    Descriptive Essay

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    Although we weren’t going to any local restaurant for our family meal‚ I was excited about traveling the distance to Golden Corral. When we arrived to Golden Corral all I could see was a multiple array of cars wrapped around a tan building with a big neon red sign reading Golden Corral. I peered through the back window of my parent’s car looking for an available parking spot‚ but all I could think about at this point was my social anxiety from all the people that must be inside this place. Surprisingly

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    Hurricane Katrina Can you imagine being in one of the most devastating hurricanes ever well that’s what the people in New Orleans went through? In this essay I will talk about hurricane Katrina that took place in the New Orleans. In my three paragraphs in paragraph two I will talk about who‚ what‚ when‚ where‚ why‚ how‚ in paragraph Three I will talk about who it effected who it I going to affect and why it is important‚ and why it was important and in paragraph four I will talk about facts

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    2005‚ the State of Louisiana was hit with one of the most devastating natural disasters the United States has ever seen. New Orleans specifically was among the cities who felt the full force of Hurricane Katrina. While the storm itself was very powerful the damage wasn’t caused necessarily by the hurricane but by the failure in the levee system. According to Jennifer Trevedi‚ In the book‚ Encyclopedia of Disaster‚ Jennifer Trevedi describes the extent of the damage through breaches of the levee.

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    Hurricanes and Tornadoes Whoa look outside what’s that outside!? A hurricane or tornado now you can tell the differences! Their similar how are they different? Did you know that hurricanes are about 300 miles wide‚ although they can be wider? Hurricane winds always rotate to the middle of the storm. Tornados are thunderstorms‚ which are made up of large‚ super cells. You need warm‚ moist air‚ after the masses meet they create instability in the atmosphere. The typical wedge tornado is straight

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    barrier islands which are the first and main defense against hurricanes. But the cost for these projects were too big to even consider them. People then noticed that the Army Corps of Engineers already dredge 40 to 45 million cubic yards of sediment from the delta each year. This could be put to good use but instead the sediment is dumped

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    Descriptive paragraphs

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    A teacher’s way of teaching and leading can have a significant impact on the emotional and mental development of his or her students.    As I step into my math class‚ I see eight students lining up in a row with their hands out in front of them. Mercilessly‚ the teacher swings his stick at their hands‚ counting from one to ten. Each time the stick beats down‚ I can feel as if a nail is hammered into my eardrums. My heart continues to pound as some of the students cries. The mad teacher finishes

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    Hurricanes are one of the most deadliest storms on Earth and are only called hurricanes when they from over by the Atlantic or Eastern Pacific Ocean.Hurricanes also from near the equator by warm oceans. First the hurricane needs the ocean’s temperature to rise to about eighty degrees from about fifty feet to one hundred sixty five feet below surface (Underwater). Another important key a hurricane needs to form is winds mainly coming from the west (Westward)‚ as this happens the water evaporates due

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    Tornadoes vs. Hurricanes Hurricanes and tornadoes are both very serious‚ strong forces of nature that can be extremely destructive and devastating. They are of the most violent natural catastrophes ever‚ and both can cause great damage with their overwhelming windstorms. They both consist of very heavy rain and winds and have unusually high wind-speeds. Although they seem a lot alike and very similar‚ they have many differences. Hurricanes and tornadoes are both stormy

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    A hurricane is an intense tropical storm with powerful winds and heavy rain‚ also known as a cyclone. Hurricanes and tornadoes are both storm systems that can cause a lot of destruction. Hurricanes are much larger than tornadoes but tornadoes generate faster winds. They both need warm and cold air to become a hurricane or tornado‚ but are different in the way they form. Hurricanes and tornadoes both have a calm area at the center called an eye. The eye of a hurricane is the calmest. The winds around

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