Technically, a recent event is in the past. The deadliest storm to earn the title "Hurricane" was the Great Hurricane of 1780. The deadliest tropical cyclone (the generic term for storms such as hurricanes) was the Bhola Cyclone of 1970.
The five deadliest storms in the past century to actually be called hurricanes were:Hurricane Mitch, 1998 (19,000-21,000 dead)Hurricane Fifi, 1974 (8,000-10,000 dead)Hurricane Flora, 1963 (7,100-8,000 dead)Okeechobee Hurricane, 1928 (4,000+ dead)Cuba Hurricane, 1932 (2,500-3,100 dead)However, "hurricanes" in other parts of the world are not called hurricanes but by different names. The generic term for such a storm is tropical cyclone. The deadliest tropical cyclones in the past century areBhola Cyclone, 1970 (300,000-500,000 dead)Cyclone Nargis, 2008 (138,000 dead)1942 Bengal Cyclone (40,000 dead)1963 East Pakistan Cyclone, (22,000 dead)Hurricane Mitch, 1998 (19,00-21000 dead)
Hurricane Katrina
Not at all. Hurricane Andrew was a category 5 hurricane, making it one of the strongest hurricanes of the past 20 years.
The deadliest tornado to hit Florida in the past 10 years was the Deland, Florida EF3 tornado of February 2, 2007. This tornado killed 13 people.
devastation
Happened is the past tense of happen.
The first Hurricane was Hurricane Bertha Arthur was the first tropical storm
The past tense of happened is happen.
The past tense of happen is happened.
it depends on where you live but i think so
No, "recently" is typically used with present perfect tense to indicate an action that occurred in the past but with relevance to the present. It is not commonly used with the simple past tense.
No. The name Hunter does not appear in any list of past hurricane names, nor is it available for use in any upcoming hurricane season.