yep
No. At least hurricanes do not cause volcanoes to erupt. The two are unrelated. A volcano could erupt after a hurricane strikes, but the timing would simply be a coincidence.
there lots of diffrent ways slow steady fast .
It is not uncommon for volcanoes to erupt every year, someplace in the world. Two countries that have volcanoes that erupt from time to time are the United States and the Philippines. Other countries include El Salvador, Iceland, and Africa.
yes sometimes
Ash and pumice are common materials.
Volcanoes underwater erupt in much the same way as those on dry land. They erupt when pressure builds up. The difference between these two types of volcanoes is that the lava produced in an underwater volcano cools dramatically faster than the lava on land.
On average there are about 50 volcanic eruptions recorded each year, but they are from different volcanoes. It is doubtful that any volcano would erupt 5 times every year. Volcanoes can enter into different phases of activity and no two volcanoes are alike. One volcano may erupt every few years while another may go thousands of years without erupting. A volcano may erupt many times in a relatively short time as part of a phase of activity or, in the case of kilauea, sustained a single continuous eruption for a long time.
it will exploed for two to three days
Mount Etna one of the most active volcanoes in the world is made up of two central craters. The volcanoes sides have many vents each of which can erupt independently of each other.
Active volcanoes are found on mainly plate margins, with the few examples of hot spots all over the place (e.g. Moana Loa on Hawaii). Volcanoes found at constructive plate margins are more effusive and erupt basaltic lava (e.g. Iceland) and volcanoes found NEAR destructive plate margins are explosive and erupt either andesitic or rhyolitic lava (e.g. Mount Saint Helens-however this volcano might not erupt for quite a while whereas the other two example erupt very frequently).
Maybe. The New Horizons spacecraft has observed two possible ice volcanoes, also known as cryovolcanoes. Unlike volcanoes here on Earth, these erupt with an icy mix of frozen water, ammonia, methane and/or nitrogen.
magma