Hurricane storms are in categories and typically follow the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale.
The scale is as follows:
Category 1 75 - 95 mph winds
Category 2 96 - 110 mph winds
Category 3 111 - 129 mph winds
Category 4 130 - 156 mph winds
Category 5 157+ mph winds
No. A hurricane is a type of storm, but most storms are not hurricanes.
The type of food they eat over in barbados (:
Hurricanes, like other storms, produce low pressure.
Hurricanes and tropical storms are both named. Hurricanes have more detailed and already thought of names, while tropical storms aren't as important.
Yes. There are blizzards, snow storms, dust storms, ice storms, tornadoes (though they come from thunderstorms), and cyclones (including hurricanes).
No. Storms and hurricanes can create tornados.
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Yes
Hurricanes and other tropical cyclones such as typhoons are just about the only storms that get names.
Hurricanes are large spinning storms
No. Tornadoes are on land. Hurricanes are storms on water.