(1st) put wood and tape on all windows (2nd) get plenty of bottled water and canned food
A hurricane with 120 mph winds would be classified as a Category 3 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale. Category 3 hurricanes are considered major hurricanes and have the potential to cause extensive damage.
The name given to the 13th hurricane of 2012 would be "Nadine" as per the Atlantic hurricane name list.
Hurricane Irene keywords: storm, hurricane, natural disaster, evacuation, preparedness, damage, safety, recovery efforts.
No, because it is a general/nonspecific noun, however if you were naming a particular hurricane i.e. Hurricane Katrina, then a capital letter for hurricane would be needed because it is a proper noun.
idk
A hurricane with 120 mph winds would be classified as a Category 3 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale. Category 3 hurricanes are considered major hurricanes and have the potential to cause extensive damage.
It would have to be a hurricane, as tornadoes do not have names.
if a hurricane dont ocurred
It would depend on how big the hurricane is and in what direction it is moving in.
the hurricane we just had was hurricane Irene and soon we are going to have hurricane Tiarra.(2012)
No, Hurricanes are called typhoons in the east. So in Japan a hurricane would be called a typhoon.
A hurricane with sustained winds of 129 mph would be at the upper cusp of category 3.
No, there has not been a Hurricane Timothy in recorded history. The closest name would be Hurricane Tim, which occurred in 2000.
Hurricane Fey would be categorized as a tropical storm.
No, Hurricane usually do not stray far from the tropics.
Hurricane Katrina was the deadliest and most destructive Atlantic hurricane of the 2005 Atlantic hurricane season.You do not have to write "happen in", simply "What year did hurricane Katherine happen?" would suffice.
Hurricane..are you serious?? that would have to be one HUGE one to get all the way here!