Basically. There's a North Pacific and a South Pacific. I think. (ex: the North Pacific garbage thing)
I don't know about time, but in terms of distance, if you are going to Ireland from New Zealand, it's about the same. If you're East of New Zealand (and I assume you live in North or South America, based on the question), it's quicker to fly over the Atlantic Ocean. If you live West of New Zealand, it's probably faster to fly West, but you're already on the other side of the Pacific Ocean.
The Pacific Ocean is the world's largest, in area. It is much larger than the Atlantic Ocean.
No. The two Islands aren't even in the same ocean.
Stiller Ocean is just the name of the ocean in German. Stiller in German language means exactly same thing as Pacific in Latin - quiet, peaceful. Asking "when" it was named Stiller Ocean is kind of like asking "when" it was named Pacific Ocean.
Almost
Fiji is in the South Pacific Ocean, east of Australia, and roughly on the same latitude as Northern Australia.
Pacific (same root as pacifist...)
No. The Cayman Islands are in the Caribbean Sea and Japan is in the Pacific Ocean.
Hurricanes are created in the Atlantic Ocean. The same things when created in the Pacific Ocean are called typhoons.
Yes it is different because if it goes to another ocean then the water level will drop. No, the previous posted answer is incorrect. Ocean water level is the same anywhere. Sea level on the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans are the same.
To some extent but they lack the Pacific Ocean.