当有台风的时候你能看到什么的英文作文
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篇1
    What You Can See During a Typhoon
    Hi there! My name is Emily and I'm 10 years old. Today I'm going to tell you all about what you can see when a typhoon (that's what we call a hurricane where I live) comes to town. It's a pretty crazy experience!
    First of all, let me explain what a typhoon actually is. It's a huge storm with really powerful circular winds that spin around a central "eye." Typhoons form over warm ocean waters and can grow to be absolutely massive - some are over 600 miles across! The winds can reach over 150 mph, which is insanely fast. That's almost as fast as a race car going at top speed. Typhoons also bring lots and lots of rain, which can cause major flooding.
    When a typhoon is on its way, you start to see the first signs a few days beforehand. The weather forecasters on TV keep talking about this big storm that's coming. My school even had to cancel classes for a few days because it was going to be too dangerous with those monster winds!
    Then the day before the typhoon arrives, the winds really start picking up. You can hear them howling loudly outside. The trees start swaying back and forth, and sometimes branches or coconuts get blown off and go flying! My mom has to bring in all the plants and patio furniture from outside so they don't get blown away.
    As the storm gets closer, the skies start turning this really weird greenish-gray color. It looks so eerie and unnatural. The air also feels weirdly warm and heavy, almost like you can feel the moisture in it. Sometimes you'll get these big sudden gusts of wind that seem to come out of nowhere and shake the whole house!
    If you look outside during the actual typhoon, it is just total chaos everywhere. The rain is coming down in these intense, blinding sheets. The wind is so incredibly powerful that it's a
ctually bending the trees parallel to the ground. Things like trash cans, loose branches, even sometimes roof tiles are just whipping through the air.
    During one typhoon, we looked out the window and saw a neighbor's big trampoline go flying right over our house! Another time, the wind was so strong that it actually ripped a metal street sign right out of the ground and sent it spinning down the road. It's wild seeing such ordinary objects turned into deadly projectiles by those incredible winds.
    The noise is perhaps the most terrifying part. It's this constant roar, like a hundred jet engines going full blast. The house creaks and groans as it gets pummeled by the winds. Sometimes you'll hear a huge crash as a tree falls over or part of a roof gets ripped off a building. The power always goes out at some point too, which makes it even scarier being in the dark with that roaring sound surrounding you.
    Flooding is another crazy thing you can experience. All that intense rainfall has nowhere to go, so it starts pooling into huge puddles and makeshift lakes in yards and streets. I've had the whole first floor of our house get flooded before, with over a foot of water rushing th
rough! We had to go upstairs and wait it out until the storm passed. Going outside during the flood is like walking through a river - the water can be powerful enough to actually sweep you off your feet if you're not careful.
    The eye of the storm is a temporary period of total calm right in the center. The winds die down completely, the rain stops, and the skies actually clear up. It's such a surreal, but it only lasts for a little while before the storm's other side comes crashing in with incredible fury. I remember playing outside during one storm's eye, but then my parents rushed us all back inside when they saw the winds starting to kick up again on the horizon.
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    After what feels like an eternity, the wind and rain finally start dying down, signaling that the worst is over. The sun will emerge, and you can see all the debris and damage that the typhoon has caused. Downed trees, shingles torn off roofs, fences blown over, that sort of thing. Sometimes entire houses or buildings can get leveled if the storm was intense enough. Boats get tossed around like toys. There are always a lot of power lines down too, leaving neighborhoods without electricity for days or weeks.
    Driving around after a typhoon is crazy - streets can be completely flooded still or blocked off by fallen trees and wreckage. Stop lights are out, signs are down, anything not bolted down is likely scattered across yards and sidewalks.
    But you know what the weirdest thing is? After going through something so powerful and terrifying, within a few days, s back to normal. Cleanup crews come through and remove all the debris. Power gets restored, businesses reopen, kids go back to school. And before you know it, you've almost forgotten what it was like to experience that incredible force until the next typhoon Season rolls around again.
    Well, that's my story about what you can see during one of these monster typhoon storms! It's definitely an experience I'll never forget. While they are pretty scary to go through, I always feel kind of in awe of that incredible raw power too. Typhoons really show you how small we are compared to the forces of nature sometimes. Thanks for reading, and I hope you never have to experience one of these storms first-hand! Stay safe out there.

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