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Version 1.0perfect Storm

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  • The first use of the expression in the meteorological sense comes from Thursday May 30th 1850, when the Rev. Lloyd of Withington (Manchester, England) describes 'A perfect storm of thunder and lightning all over England (except London) doing fearful and fatal damage' when recording monthly rainfall measurements for that year.
  • The Perfect Storm is a 10mm submachine gun which is the only weapon that uses the otherwise unused Tier 4 legendary effect known as 'Incendiary,' which deals a.
  • NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGMENT INTENDED! Here's The Order:1.FBI Warning Screen2.The Perfect Storm Soundtrack Promo3.1997 Warner Home Video Logo4.Aspect Ratio Scree.
Version 1.0perfect Storm

A soft fall rain slips down through the trees and the smell of ocean is so strong that it can almost be licked off the air. Trucks rumble along Rogers Street and men in t-shirts stained with fishblood shout to each other from the decks of boats. Beneath them the ocean swells up against the black pilings and sucks back down to the barnacles.

Version 1 0 Perfect Storm Bowling Ball

Version 1 0 perfect storm bowling ball
Version 1 0 perfect storm full

noun

Version 1.0perfect Storm

A soft fall rain slips down through the trees and the smell of ocean is so strong that it can almost be licked off the air. Trucks rumble along Rogers Street and men in t-shirts stained with fishblood shout to each other from the decks of boats. Beneath them the ocean swells up against the black pilings and sucks back down to the barnacles.

Version 1 0 Perfect Storm Bowling Ball

noun

Version 1 0 Perfect Storm 2

  • 1A particularly violent storm arising from a rare combination of adverse meteorological factors.

    • ‘And people need to understand this storm was a perfect storm.'
    1. 1.1A particularly bad or critical state of affairs, arising from a number of negative and unpredictable factors.
      ‘the past two years have been a perfect storm for the travel industry'
      • ‘He's kind of like the perfect storm with his combination of looks and pedigree.'
      • ‘When these and other factors coincided they created the perfect storm.'
      • ‘The truth is we were part of the perfect storm in the late 1990s, as was the media, as was the financial community and the investment banks.'
      • ‘It's only a small detail in this story, but it has all the ingredients for a perfect storm.'
      • ‘This convergence with the Internet is creating the perfect storm.'
      • ‘At the same time, millions of employees face added insecurities as defined benefits are being put in jeopardy due to the perfect storm of pension funding: Falling interest rates, tumbling asset prices, and a weak economy.'
      • ‘Combine that trend with the speed and ubiquity of travel over long distances and with the vast global inequities in the distribution of primary and preventive health care, and you have the makings of an epidemiological perfect storm.'
      • ‘This just seems like a perfect storm for the airlines.'
      • ‘We face a perfect storm of environmental degradation and the ongoing collapse of a rickety, misbegotten infrastructure that in most cases is provoking the very conditions that will topple it.'
      • ‘We are leveraging our assets and our core competencies to take advantage of what I would characterize as the perfect storm of what took place over the last three or four years in the retail record industry.'
      • ‘Indeed, football fans around the country will be joining the inactive list as their bodies fail to digest a perfect storm of spicy, saucy, salty, and fatty foods.'
      • ‘The perfect storm of a number of events in the past year has raised considerably our level of awareness of potential threats - which is unbelievably healthy.'
      • ‘But our perfect storm of bad publicity, political grandstanding and corporate trouble doesn't have to swallow us.'
      • ‘If it weren't for scant inflation and low interest rates, corporate America would have steered right into the middle of a perfect storm.'
      • ‘The past five years have been a perfect storm of low interest rates, easy credit, and rising household costs.'
      • ‘This year's theme will be the perfect storm in economic and financial markets.'
      • ‘That made a perfect storm, if you will, for clubs elsewhere to make their cases, and that they did.'
      • ‘It is brewed in a perfect storm of new markets, new technologies, and a new enterprise logic.'
      • ‘It looks to me like a more perfect storm has struck the school lunchroom and vending channels.'
      • ‘And a wedding is a perfect storm of all those interests.'

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