yes it can
two sisters named the same thing,
Actually, Katrina is a hurricane, so they are the same, but there have only ever been two hurricanes named Katrina. There was the infamous Hurricane Katrina of 2005 and a lesser known one in 1981.
Yes, there have been instances of two hurricanes making landfall on the same day. This occurred in 1933 when two hurricanes struck on the same day along the U.S. Gulf Coast. It is a rare event but not unprecedented in meteorological history.
There was never a tornado named Bill as tornadoes do not have names. Two hurricanes named Bill occurred in 2003 and 2015.
There was 1 tropical cyclone named Kylie in 1995 but it is not clear if it reached hurricane strength.
You can't have two (or more) hurricanes at the same time in the same place. Even if you did superimpose two different weather systems on top of eachother, the result would still be one weather system, or in this case, one hurricane. You can, however, have three hurricanes at the same time in different places.
That's not an easy question to answer! You could ask the same thing about any number in existence: why is a three called a three?
Yes. In the Atlantic there were two hurricanes named Karen in 2001 and 2007. There were also tropical storms named Karen in 1989, 1995, and 2013.
The number of hurricanes varies from year to year, but on average, there have been about 14 named storms including hurricanes in the Atlantic Basin each year over the past 20 years. This would roughly equate to around 280 hurricanes in the last two decades.
No. There were two previous tropical storms named Matthew in 2004 and 2010, but neither became hurricanes.
No it is not the same thing thing it is two separate cities
Hurricanes are not specifically designated as male or female. They are named alternately from a predetermined list regardless of gender. When two hurricanes hit Florida consecutively, they would be identified by their respective names rather than being categorized by gender.