Monsoon
Vietnam often encounters tropical storms, typhoons, and tropical depressions due to its location in Southeast Asia. These storms can bring heavy rainfall, strong winds, and flooding to the region.
Not exactly. A tropical storm is indeed a kind of storm, but not all storms are tropical storms.
If a tropical storm in the Atlantic had sustained winds in the range of 39-73 mph it is simply called a tropical storm. If sustained winds reach or exceed 74 mph, the storm is called a hurricane.
warm weather because it is a tropical climate
A hurricane cannot be a tropical storm as by definition a tropical storm is weaker than a hurricane. A tropical storm is a tropical cyclone with winds of 39-73 mph. Only when winds reach 74 mph or greater is the storm considered a hurricane. A hurricane can weaken into a tropical storm and from there into a tropical depression (winds under 39 mph). A tropical storm or depression may also degenerate into a remnant low, which is too disorganized to be considered a tropical cyclone. A tropical cyclone (hurricane, tropical storm, or tropical depression) may also become an extratropical cyclone after moving over land or cold water. Around the world hurricanes have different names. In the northwest Pacific ocean they are called typhoons, In the Indian ocean they are called intense tropical cyclones, and in the south Pacific they are simply called cyclones. However, these are just different names for essentially the same kind of storm.
Vietnam's weather is a tropical kind of climate so I guess it would be sunny and rainy a lot I don't think it snows there though.
A tropical storm with winds of 119 km per hour (approximately 74 mph) or higher is classified as a hurricane in the Atlantic and Northeast Pacific regions, or a typhoon in the Northwest Pacific. In the South Pacific and Indian Ocean, it is referred to as a severe tropical cyclone. These storms can cause significant damage due to their high winds, heavy rainfall, and storm surges.
Tropical kind
A meeting with space aliens during a UFO incident is what is involved in an encounter of the third kind. There may or may not be some kind of communication in this encounter. What distinguishes this encounter from that of the fourth kind is the lack of human removal, whether forcible or otherwise, from the scene.
Lessons learned in the Vietnam War, caused the media to be RESTRICTED in this campaign. The term used was "embedded" into certain cells, for control purposes.
The word encounter could be followed by prepositions such as with (encounter with danger). Also the preposition of (encounter of the third kind).
communism