BOTH "British" and "American" English! This is GENERAL English that will be useful around the world. I wouldn't worry so much about trying to learn a certain type of English. What is MORE important is being able to express yourself and communicate. Also, the reality is that there is not much difference between the two apart from accents. Another thing is that even inside each country, there are many different accents (e.g. between states or even cities) so it is best to learn general English to communicate. By the way, I am a native English speaker from New Zealand.
Thunderous exists though I would never use it in a conversation or writing. It is quite rare to hear unless you are talking about someone's loud voice. Yes, flooded can be an adjective... a flooded plain.
Many videos have subtitles though I depend on viewers to create the subtitles in different languages. I only use English in the videos because not everyone speaks Spanish. How you you feel if I started speaking in Arabic? Also, many videos have subtitles though I depend on viewers to create the subtitles in different languages.
Pretty poor weather lesson. Especially you the English have countless nouns, adjectives and expressions to describe the weather. Where is rainstorm, thunderstorm, hailstorm, snowstorm or blizzard, icestorm...
As mentioned in the description, this is the BASIC weather vocabulary lesson (so as to not overwhelm beginners) ... I have another more advanced lesson coming up with type of wind, rain etc. If I showed it in this lesson, learners at a lower level would be overwhelmed and wouldn't retain anything!
It is unfortunate that you have Richie Blackmore's Rainbow Rising image on your profile and giving such a negative comment without reading the description.
@@WoodwardEnglish My musical tastes have nothing to do with my thought about the lesson. I don't know why it's unfortunate of me to have such a beautiful and powerful image on my profile. Credit where it's due, you're perfectly right when you point out that I should have read the description box before.