Werbung
 Übersetzung für 'storm god' von Englisch nach Deutsch
NOUN   a storm-god | storm-gods
relig.
storm god
Sturmgott {m}
relig.
storm god
Wettergott {m}
myth.relig.
storm-god [also: storm god]
Gewittergott {m}
Teiltreffer
meteo.
thunderstorm <t-storm, T STORM, tl>
Gewitter {n}
2172
stormAndrang {m}
23
to stormbestürmen
24
to stormstürmen
402
meteo.
storm
Unwetter {n}
244
meteo.
storm
Wetter {n} [veraltet, poet., geh., regional: Unwetter]
stormAnsturm {m}
58
meteo.
November storm
Novembersturm {m}
storm-swept {adj}sturmumbraust [sturmumtost]
naut.
storm sail
Sturmsegel {n}
storm-tossed {adj}vom Sturm gebeutelt
storm-lashed {adj}sturmgepeitscht [geh.] [See]
mighty stormmächtiger Sturm {m}
insur.meteo.
storm damage
Sturmschaden {m}
sinking stormnachlassender Sturm {m}
storm bellSturmglocke {f}
meteo.
storm track
Sturmbahn {f}
meteo.
storm rainfall
Starkregen {m}
storm-affected {adj}vom Sturm betroffen
geol.meteo.
magnetic storm
Magnetsturm {m}
23 Übersetzungen
Neue Wörterbuch-Abfrage: Einfach jetzt tippen!

Anwendungsbeispiele Englisch
  • A range of high definition movies, including Sci Fi Channel original production "Ba'al: The Storm God", aired on the channel along with "Eli Stone", "Tin Man" and "Sanctuary".
  • In both versions of the Orochi myth, the Shinto storm god Susanoo (or "Susa-no-O") is expelled from Heaven for tricking his sister Amaterasu, the sun goddess.
  • The Baal Cycle, also known as the Epic of Baal, is a collection of stories about the god Baal from the Canaanite area who is also referred to as Hadad, the storm-god.
  • In Samoan mythology Fa'atiu is the wind and storm god. In one Samoan legend, Tiʻitiʻi imprisons the winds one by one in his canoe or calabash, leaving only Fisaga free.
  • A similar glyph is used in Mixtec codices as the day sign Water and it is likely that its meaning in Zapotec is identical, therefore being the appropriate glyph for the rain and storm god.

  • Additionally, the storm god with the epitheton "piḫaššašši" was also venerated at Tunna.
  • Like the Typhonomachy, several Near East myths, tell of battles between a storm-god and a snaky monster associated with Mount Kasios, the modern Jebel Aqra.
  • The name Teucer is believed to be related to the name of the West Hittite God Tarku (East Hittite Teshub)—the Indo-European Storm God—a role which explains his relationship to Belus, who is associated with the Carthaginian god Baal Hammon.
  • Hadad is also the name of a Semitic storm-god.
  • Among some Native Americans, Katahdin was believed to be the home of the storm god Pamola, and thus an area to be avoided.

  • The Hattian pantheon of gods included the storm-god "Taru" (represented by a bull), the sun-goddess "Furušemu" or "Wurunšemu" (represented by a leopard), and a number of other elemental gods.
  • Early blade inscriptions are known from the Bronze Age, a Hittite sword found at Hattusa bears an inscription chiseled into the bronze, stating that the blade was deposited as an offering to the storm-god by king Tuthaliya.
  • The Mamaragan incarnation of Shazam is similarly a powerful, immortal wizard and storm god with vast magical abilities whose abilities often manifests as lightning and/or invoked by saying "Shazam"; he is the creator of the Living Lightning spell, granting people powers associated with various aspects of divine entities that spell out "SHAZAM".
  • She was considered to be the chief deity in some sources, in place of her husband. Her consort was the Storm-God; they and their children were all derived from the former Hattic pantheon.
  • In the Slavic version of the myth, Perun is a god of thunder while Veles acts as a dragon who opposes him, consistent with the Vala etymology; he is also similar to the Etruscan underworld monster Vetha and to the dragon Illuyankas, enemy of the storm god of Hittite mythology.

  • The bull was commonly the symbol and depiction of ancient Near Eastern storm gods, hence Taurus the bull, and hence the name of the mountains.
Werbung
© dict.cc English-German dictionary 2024
Enthält Übersetzungen von der TU Chemnitz sowie aus Mr Honey's Business Dictionary (nur Englisch/Deutsch).
Links auf das Wörterbuch oder auch auf einzelne Übersetzungen sind immer herzlich willkommen!