terms |
churada |
As nouns the difference between terms and churada
is that
terms is while
churada is (meteorology) a heavy downpour, typical of the during the winter months.
winter |
churada |
As nouns the difference between winter and churada
is that
winter is traditionally the fourth of the four seasons, typically regarded as being from December 23 to March 20 in continental regions of the Northern Hemisphere or the months of June, July and August in the Southern Hemisphere. It is the time when the sun is lowest in the sky, resulting in short days, and the time of year with the lowest atmospheric temperatures for the region while
churada is a heavy downpour, typical of the
Mariana Islands during the winter months.
As a verb winter
is to spend the winter (in a particular place).
As a proper noun Winter
is {{surname|lang=en}} (A common Germanic one..
typical |
churada |
As nouns the difference between typical and churada
is that
typical is anything that is typical, normal, or standard while
churada is (meteorology) a heavy downpour, typical of the during the winter months.
As an adjective typical
is capturing the overall sense of a thing.
downpour |
churada |
As nouns the difference between downpour and churada
is that
downpour is a heavy rain while
churada is (meteorology) a heavy downpour, typical of the during the winter months.
As a verb downpour
is to pour down; rain heavily.
heavy |
churada |
As nouns the difference between heavy and churada
is that
heavy is a villain or bad guy; the one responsible for evil or aggressive acts while
churada is (meteorology) a heavy downpour, typical of the during the winter months.
As an adjective heavy
is (of a physical object) having great weight or
heavy can be having the heaves.
As an adverb heavy
is heavily.
As a verb heavy
is to make heavier.