outbreak of war - traducción al árabe
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outbreak of war - traducción al árabe

1884 NATURAL EVENT IN THE UNITED STATES
Enigma Tornado Outbreak; 1884 Enigma tornado outbreak; Tornado outbreak of February 19-20, 1884; Tornado outbreak of February 19–20, 1884; Enigma tornado outbreak of 1884

outbreak of war      
نشوب / إندلاع / الحرب
tug of war         
  • Tug of war competition in [[1904 Summer Olympics]]
  • devas]] to left and right, and [[apsaras]] and [[Indra]] above.</ref> ([[Angkor Wat]], Cambodia)
  • A tug of war in [[Japan]] from "[[Chōjū-jinbutsu-giga]]" (Animal-person Caricatures) 12-13th century
  • 2004 Greek Week Puddle Pull at [[Miami University]]
  • Tug of war as a religious ritual in Japan, drawn in the 18th century. It is still seen in [[Osaka]] every January.
  • [[Harvard]] Tug of War team, 1888
  • Tug of war at the [[Highland Games]] in [[Stirling]]
  • Inter-house sports- tug of war
  • Naha's annual Otsunahiki (giant tug-of-war) has its roots in a centuries-old local custom. It is the biggest among Japan's traditional tugs of war.
  • Indonesian Independence Day]]
  • The Dutch team at the 2006 World Championships
  • Women in a tug of war, at the annual [[Pushkar Fair]], [[Rajasthan]], [[India]]
SPORT IN WHICH TWO TEAMS PULL ON OPPOSITE ENDS OF A ROPE
Rope pulling; Tug-of-War; Tug-of-war; Tug-o-war; Tug Of War; Tug o' war; Tug war; Rope jousting; Tug of War; Rope Jousting; Tug O War; Rope war; Tugging war; Puddle Pull
صراع . شَدّ الحبْل
OUTBREAK         
  • endemic]], [[epidemic]] and [[pandemic]]
  • Epidemic curves
SUDDEN INCREASE IN OCCURRENCES OF A DISEASE IN A PARTICULAR TIME AND PLACE
Outbreak Investigation; Outbreaks; Disease outbreaks; Outbreak; Virus outbreak

ألاسم

اِنْتِشار ; اِنْدِلَاع ; تَفَشٍّ ; شُبُوب

Definición

outbreak
¦ noun a sudden occurrence of war, disease, etc.

Wikipedia

Enigma tornado outbreak

On February 19–20, 1884, one of the largest and most widespread tornado outbreaks in American history occurred over the Southeastern United States. Known as the Enigma tornado outbreak due to the unknown number of total tornadoes, the outbreak produced the largest 24-hour total of killer tornadoes until the 1974 Super Outbreak on April 3–4. The precise number of tornadoes as well as fatalities incurred during the outbreak is unknown, but the death toll was variously estimated to range from 370 to 2,000 at the time. A reliable survey by the Signal Corps in 1889 located 182 fatalities, and a reanalysis by tornado researcher Thomas P. Grazulis in 1993 counted 178 deaths. Nonetheless, an inspection of newspaper reports and governmental studies published in the aftermath reveals successive, long-tracked tornado families striking Alabama, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia, with an estimation of at least 37 tornadoes. Some events counted as tornadoes in initial studies such as those by John Park Finley were likely downbursts, especially in northern and northeastern portions of the outbreak.

The majority of reported tornado activity was seen across Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina, which were all struck severely by multiple waves of tornado families. In the Southeast, the outbreak began during the late morning in Mississippi, preceded by severe thunderstorms in Louisiana. Shortly thereafter, the outbreak widened and intensified, progressing from Alabama to Virginia between noon and midnight. According to an article appearing in the Statesville (NC) Landmark three days later, the damage tally in Georgia alone was estimated to be $1 million, in 1884 dollars. The outbreak also produced the deadliest individual tornado in North Carolina history, an F4 which swept through the Rockingham area, killing 23. Tabulations from 1884 estimate a total of $3–4 million in tornado damage (with an unknown amount of flood and other damage), with 10,000 structures destroyed.

Elsewhere, wind damage, flash floods and derecho-like effects were also reported in published accounts of the outbreak. Homes were swept away by water in Louisville, Kentucky, New Albany, Indiana, and Jeffersonville, Indiana, as well as in other towns along the Ohio River. Blizzard conditions occurred in the eastern Midwest.

Ejemplos de uso de outbreak of war
1. He was studying land survey until the outbreak of war.
2. Fearing the outbreak of war, the Russians wanted their fleet out of European waters.
3. Rice then scrubbed her trip because of the sudden outbreak of war in Lebanon.
4. Furthermore, in this scenario, the nature of the outbreak of war poses additional complications.
5. With the outbreak of war several thousand Vienna and Polish Jews were slaughtered.