A weather phenomenon in the Eastern Pacific that is precisely equivalent to a hurricane, which results in wind speeds of 64 knots (118km/h) or above. Equivalent to a cyclone in the Indian Ocean and Indonesia/Australia
A typhoon is a very violent tropical storm. a very violent tropical storm (touffan (16-19 centuries), from tufan , from typhon ; influenced by daai fong )
An intense tropical weather system with a well-defined circulation and maximum sustained winds of 74 miles per hour (64 knots or higher in the Northwest Pacific Ocean (west of the International Date Line) In other parts of the world, they are known as hurricanes, tropical cyclones and severe tropical cyclones
is a tropical cyclone with winds 75 miles per hour or greater in the northwest Pacific ocean In other parts of the world, such storms have different names, such as hurricanes
The name for a tropical cyclone with sustained winds of 74 miles per hour (65 knots) or greater in the western North Pacific Ocean This same tropical cyclone is known as a hurricane in the eastern North Pacific and North Atlantic Ocean, and as a cyclone in the Indian Ocean
A tropical cyclone or hurricane off the western Pacific areas and the China seas
A violent whirlwind; specifically, a violent whirlwind occurring in the Chinese seas
A tropical cyclone with winds more than 75 miles/hr and located in the north pacific, west of the international date line
A hurricane in the north Pacific west of the International Date Line Sometimes the word is used to refer to any tropical cyclone, no matter what its wind speed It has been used to refer to tropical cyclones in the South Pacific or Indian Ocean, but this use is not considered to be correct today
A warm-core tropical cyclone with one-minute sustained winds of 74 mph or more that forms in the Northern Hemisphere west of the International Dateline (the Western Pacific) The term hurricane is used for Northern Hemisphere cyclones east of the International Dateline to the Greenwich Meridian