A tropical cyclone occurring in the western Pacific or Indian Oceans. See cyclone and hurricane.
tropical storm with origins in the Pacific Ocean. See hurricane.
A name given to the tropical revolving storms of the China Sea and the North Pacific Ocean.
A tropical cyclone with winds greater than 74 mph in the north Pacific.
a cyclone in the Northwest Pacific west of the date line
a huge atmospheric vortex formed by the heat of the water vapor from the sea surface
a hurricane, just on the other side of the world
a hurricane on the other side of the International Dateline
a hurricane that develop over the Pacific or Indian Ocean
a hurricane that occurs in the WEST Pacific
a hurricane that occurs over the western North Pacific Ocean or most of the South Pacific Ocean
a hurricane with an opposite spin
an Asian term for a hurricane
a severe tropical storm in the western Pacific Ocean
a tropical cyclone or hurricane of the western Pacific and China Sea
a tropical hurricane or cyclone of the west pacific
a tropical storm with high winds
a violent storm that is formed over the Western Pacific
a violent tropical storm with very strong winds and heavy rain. This term is used in the China seas and west Pacific areas. See also hurricane and cyclone
(pronounced TIE-foon)the name for a hurricane that forms over the western North Pacific and China Sea region.
Severe tropical hurricane occurring in the Pacific Ocean.
hurricane that occurs in eastern Asia.
The name for a tropical storm originating in the Pacific Ocean, usually the China Sea
A severe tropical storm (i.e., winds 64 knots) in the Western Pacific. The word is believed to originate from the Chinese word "ty-fung". See also Hurricane and Cyclone.
A tropical cyclone with maximum sustained winds of 75 mph or more occurring in the Western Pacific Ocean.
A hurricane which occurs in the western Pacific Ocean.
A hurricane-type storm originating in the Pacific Ocean, China Sea and the Philippines.
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.
A tropical cyclone with winds of 74 miles per hour or greater that occurs west of the International Date Line.
Large-scale closed circulation system in the atmosphere above the western Pacific with low barometric pressure and strong winds that rotate clockwise in ther southern hemisphere and counter-clockwise in the northern hemisphere. Maximum wind speed of 64 knots or more [See « hurricane » for the western Atlantic and eastern Pacific and « cyclone » for the Indian Ocean and South Pacific]. (in EM-DAT, « typhoon » is a disaster subset of disaster type « wind storm »).
A hurricane that forms in the Western Pacific Ocean.
A hurricane in the north Pacific west of the International Date Line.
a violent, spiraling tropical storm with fierce rotating winds and a calm central eye; usually develops over warm tropical seas; these storms are known as typhoons east of the international dateline
a hurricane that arises over the Pacific in he tropics
A special category of tropical cyclone peculiar to the western North Pacific Basin, frequently affecting areas in the vicinity of Guam and the North Mariana Islands. Typhoons whose maximum sustained winds attain or exceed 150 mph are called super typhoons.
Storm's aggressive reactive coverstock material, falling directly inbetween the Monsoon and ACCU-Tread materials.
A hurricane that forms over the western Pacific Ocean.
A hurricane that occurs in the Pacific Region of the Philippines or the China Sea.
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. Absolute humidity..., Backing..., Calm..., Daily mean..., Earthlight..., Fahrenheit temperature scale..., Gale..., Haboob..., Ice..., Jet streak..., Katabatic wind..., Lake effect snow..., Mackerel sky..., Nadir..., Obscuration..., Palmer drought index..., Quantitative precipitation forecast..., Radar..., Saffir..., Teleconnections..., Ultraviolet..., Valley breeze..., Walker circulation..., X-rays..., Year..., Zodiac....
(Also spelled typhon.) A severe tropical cyclone in the western North Pacific. The name is derived either from Cantonese t'ai fung (a "great wind"), from Arabic tufan ("smoke"), or from Greek typhon (a "monster"). Aristotle used typhon for a wind-containing cloud ( Meteorologica, III, 1). For a more complete discussion, see tropical cyclone.
Typhoon (David Drake) is the second supervillain in the DC Comics universe to use this title. He has been a frequent foe of the DC super-hero Firestorm, but has clashed with other heroes as well. He first appeared in a backup story in Flash series 2 #294, (February 1981) entitled "The Typhoon Is A Storm of the Soul", and was created by Gerry Conway and Jim Starlin.