Yes, they can be used multiple time... I believe the record is 11 reuses.
Yes, for Atlantic hurricanes there is a list of names for each six years. One list is repeated every seven years.
No. Hurricane names become available for reuse on a six-year cycle. However, hurricanes that are particularly bad have their names retired so that they are not reused.
There is a pre-ordered list which has names for each of the next hurricanes. Once the list is gone over. They start over.
the hurricanes strike once a year between June November.
Yes, if a storm doesn't cause much damage, its name may be used again and returned to the annual rotation. Names become available for reuse once every six years. Hurricanes that cause serious damage or loss of life will have their names "retired" upon review of the hurricane season and will never be used again.
Yes, there have been times when there were as many has 4 hurricanes in the same ocean at the same time.
Yes. Particularly destructive or memorable storms have their names "retired" ... there probably won't be another Andrew, or Katrina, or Sandy. But storms that dissipate at sea may have their names used again.
Hurricanes are formed from water but there is something else that forms hurricanes and its once water comes and its makes a world pool and then winds pushes either way and it floods the city or town
Not really. Hurricanes can only form over warm ocean water. Once they hit land they weaken rapidly and don't stay as hurricanes for very long.
If you're asking one person, "Your name is?" If you're asking several people at once, "Your names are?"
No, Minnesota does not experience hurricanes due to its location far inland from the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico where hurricanes typically form. Minnesota may experience severe storms and tornadoes, but not hurricanes.
Yes. Normally a hurricane name can be re-used once every six years.