Winter storm Eleanor has cleared into the greater part of northern Europe, including France and Germany in the wake of battering the UK, slicing energy to a huge number of homes and influencing transport.
A skier passed on in the French Alps and 15 others were harmed somewhere else in the nation, four of them genuinely.
A prepare was brushed off its tracks in Switzerland, leaving a few people with minor wounds. One individual was hit by a falling tree in the Netherlands.
Wind blasts may achieve 200km/h (124mph).
Tempest Eleanor is the UK's fifth named tempest of the season.
Tempest Eleanor interruption and homes without control in UK
In pictures: Storm Eleanor hits the UK
In northern France, the tempest slice energy to more than 200,000 families and Eleanor is set to move to different locales for the duration of the day, including Corsica.
Air travel was likewise upset in the capital, Paris, and in the east of the nation.
In Paris, the Eiffel Tower was shut in view of the solid breezes. The city's parks have likewise been shut until the point that the tempest fades away in view of stresses over falling tree limbs.
A skier was slaughtered by a falling tree in Morillon, in the Haute-Savoie locale of eastern France.
In Germany, the tempest - named Burglind there - has cleared over a significant part of the nation. It stuffed whirlwinds than 120km/h in the west of the nation and prompted transport disturbance, reports say.
Switzerland has likewise been severely hit, with nearly 14,000 homes without control. The high breezes left a few people stranded in a ski lift in St Gallen canton, upset a light plane in Stans and snapped the 13m (42ft) high Christmas tree in the capital Bern, Reuters news office reports.
In the interim, record twist whirlwinds/h (122mph) were recorded on Pilatus Peak close to the Swiss city of Lucerne, telecaster SRF revealed.
Belgium was put on "orange" alarm, the third of four cautioning levels, with authorities asking individuals to be mindful while going out in view of tree limbs and other flying items.
In the Netherlands, whirlwinds than 110km/h (68mph) were recorded as many flights were crossed out at Amsterdam's Schiphol air terminal.
A few principle streets and prepare lines were likewise shut.
Dutch experts have, out of the blue, close every one of the five noteworthy ocean obstructions to avoid flooding, as substantial regions of the nation are beneath ocean level.
In the UK a large number of homes are without power and travel has been upset after Storm Eleanor hit there.
The Met Office recorded blasts achieving 100mph (161km/h) overnight with a climate yellow cautioning still set up for Wales, England, the majority of Northern Ireland and parts of southern Scotland.
In the Republic of Ireland, 97mph blasts were recorded, and there was flooding, venture out disturbance and harm to structures.