The English word typhoon originated from the Japanese word 'taifu'.
No. Typhoons are tropical storms. Antarctica is a polar desert.
Hurricanes and other tropical cyclones such as typhoons are just about the only storms that get names.
During the 2006 season, eleven typhoons entered the Philippines. Of those, 8 were super typhoons. Six tropical storms or tropical depressions hit the Philippines in 2006, in addition to the typhoons.
In Asia tropical storms are called "Typhoons".
A person who studies typhoons is called a meteorologist or a tropical cyclone expert. They analyze the behavior and patterns of typhoons to improve forecasting and understand the impact of these powerful storms.
Severe storms that form over tropical oceans are known as hurricanes, typhoons, or cyclones, depending on the region where they occur. These storms are characterized by strong winds, heavy rainfall, and can cause significant damage to coastal areas.
On average, there are around 80 tropical storms around the world each year. These storms form in tropical or subtropical regions and can develop into hurricanes or typhoons under the right conditions. Tropical storms are a common occurrence during the hurricane season, which varies by region.
A tropical cyclone is another name for a hurricane. When massive storms grow in the Atlantic, they're known as hurricanes. However, then storms that large build in the Pacific, they're known as typhoons.
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.
Hurricanes and typhoons occur in tropical areas, but can move into extratropical areas as well. There are different types of cyclone, however. Tropical cyclones (hurricanes, typhoons, tropical storms and tropical depressions) form in tropical regions but extratropical and polar lows are cyclones as well.
A number of storms in the northern hemisphere have such characteristics including tropical cyclones (hurricanes an typhoons), some extratropical cyclones, and most tornadoes (on rare occasions they are anticyclonic).
Some do. Tropical cyclones (hurricanes, typhoons etc.), extratropical cyclones/lows, Some thunderstorms (mostly supercells), and tornadoes are all storms that rotate.