The next Atlantic tropical storm, yes.
The first named tropical storm in the Atlantic in 2003 was Tropical Storm Ana.
The firs tropical storm in the Altlantic in 2003 was Tropical Storm Ana in April, which is unusually early.
A hurricane will start as a Tropical Wave. It then becomes a Tropical Depression. A TD is given a number but not a name. Once the TD reaches 39 mile per hour winds its given a name and becomes a Tropical Storm. After reaching 74 mile per hour winds it becomes a hurricane.
Tropical disturbance -> tropical depression -> tropical storm -> tropical cyclone (hurricane). *Hurricane is a local name, for tropical cyclones (official name) that appear in the Atlantic.
Tropical Storm Colin
The next Atlantic tropical storm, yes.
Tropical Island Tropical Punch Tropical Fruit Tropical Storm Tropical Fish Tropical Paradise
The first named tropical storm in the Atlantic in 2003 was Tropical Storm Ana.
The tenth named storm of the 2011 season was Tropical Storm Jose.
A tropical depression becomes a tropical storm when sustained winds reach 39 mph or greater.
A tropical storm is given a name when it becomes a tropical storm, with winds of at least 39 mph.
When it becomes a tropical storm, or in other words, when winds reach 39 mph.
The storm named Allison never became a hurricane, it was just a tropical storm. A hurricane/tropical storm name is retired if the storm is especially devastating, and Tropical Storm Allison of 2001 caused massive damage from flooding. Because of this no future storm will be named Allison (normally a name is reused every 6 years). So instead the first tropical storm in the Atlantic in 2007 was named Andrea.
The firs tropical storm in the Altlantic in 2003 was Tropical Storm Ana in April, which is unusually early.
The first tropical storm of the 2010 Atlantic hurricane season was Hurricane Alex.
No. For one thing, tropical depressions aren't named. A system only receives a name when it reaches tropical storm status. Even then, no tropical storm or hurricane has been named Sophia.