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In order to facilitate exchanges among countries, the Economic and Social Council for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) and the Typhoon Committee of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) have developed a unified typhoon naming system, with 10 names provided by member organizations of 14 countries and regions in the Asia-Pacific region, including Cambodia, China, North Korea, the United States and Vietnam, which are recycled after approval by relevant special meetings.
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Whenever the Japan Meteorological Agency determines a tropical cyclone over the Northwest Pacific Ocean or the South China Sea as a tropical storm intensity, it is given a name according to the list and a four-digit number at the same time.
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The name is given by combining the area, crisis, size, and intensity of the typhoon at the time of the typhoon.
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Because every country has a set of lists for typhoons, and that's what it comes from.
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It may be based on the shape of his formation, or the point of his origin.
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Countries around the world will provide a certain name for typhoons, compile them, and name them uniformly among these names every time a typhoon comes.
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It can be named by various characteristics such as the time and place of the typhoon.
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There are certain systems and standards, and in the end, they will be decided through negotiation.
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This should be done according to the time and place of the time.
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The 30th meeting of the Typhoon Committee of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), held in Hong Kong, China, from 25 November to 1 December 1997, decided that tropical cyclones in the Northwest Pacific and the South China Sea should be named in the Asian style, and that the new nomenclature should be introduced from 1 January 2000.
The new nomenclature is a nomenclature developed in advance and then reused in a sequential cycle from year to year, with a total of 140 names provided by 14 member states and territories in the Asia-Pacific region of the World Meteorological Organization, including Cambodia, China, North Korea, Hong Kong, Japan, Laos, Macau, Malaysia, Micronesia, the Philippines, South Korea, Thailand, the United States and Viet Nam, each with 10 names.
The 140 names are divided into 10 groups, and the 14 names in each group are arranged alphabetically according to the English names of each member country, and are used in a cyclical order, i.e., the Northwest Pacific and South China Sea tropical cyclone nomenclature tables, while retaining the original tropical cyclone numbers.
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1. Reference Encyclopedia: The internationally unified tropical cyclone nomenclature is formed and affected by tropical cyclones in neighboring countries and regions.
A naming table is developed by a colleague and then recycled in sequence year after year. The name is given in English first, and each member country can translate the name into the local language according to its pronunciation or meaning. When a tropical cyclone name is used, it causes some.
Huge loss to one or more member countries, the name will be permanently removed and discontinued. Member States that have suffered losses.
Delisting may be appealed to the WMO.
2. Refer to the encyclopedia.
This is a very detailed statement.
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The names of typhoons given by China are Anemone, Jade Rabbit, Fengshen, Dujuan, Seahorse, Wukong, Bailu, Poseidon, Dianmu, and Begonia. The names of typhoons given by China are Anemone, Jade Rabbit, Fengshen, Dujuan, Seahorse, Wukong, Bailu, Poseidon, Dianmu, and Begonia. People have been naming typhoons since the early 20th century, and it is said that the first time a typhoon was given a name was given to an Australian forecaster in the early 20th century, who named a tropical cyclone after a politician he didn't like, so that meteorologists could openly jokingly call it.
A general classification of the nomenclature species of typhoons.
Named after flowers: lilies and roses in Korea, Tan Mei in Vietnam, rhododendrons and begonias in China.
Named after birds: North Korea's wild goose and seagull, South Korea's flying swallow and swan, etc.
Named after place names: Kai Tak and High Island in Hong Kong, Xia Lang in Vietnam, etc.
Named after constellations: mainly Japanese Libras, Capricorns, etc.
Named after mythological figures: Vietnam's "Mountain God", China's "Wukong", "Electric Mother", etc.
Named after women: Maria from the United States, Connie from Cambodia, Fasi from Laos, etc.
Fish and animals named after fruits: Mangosteen from Thailand, Higos (fig) from the United States, Dawi (elephant) from Cambodia, Taba (freshwater fish) from Malaysia, and so on.
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The ten Chinese names are: Anemone, Jade Rabbit, Fengshen, Cuckoo, Seahorse, Wukong, White Deer, Poseidon, Electric Mother, and Begonia.
There are two theories about the origin of the "typhoon".
The first type is "transliteration", which includes three types: one is evolved from the Cantonese "gale"; the second is evolved from the Hokkien dialect "Fengtai"; The third is that during the occupation of Taiwan by the Dutch, it was named after the character Taifeng Typhoon in the Greek epic "History of Theocracy".
The second type is "source theory", because Taiwan is located in the Pacific Ocean and the South China Sea, most of the typhoons have a northward path, and many typhoons pass through the Taiwan Strait and enter the mainland, so they are called typhoons.
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Tropical cyclones are named according to their numbers and names.
Tropical cyclones were first distinguished by their location (mainly the latitude and longitude where the center of the tropical cyclone is located), and from January 1, 2, 2, when the Meteorological Observatory issues a tropical cyclone warning, the tropical cyclone name will be used in addition to the tropical cyclone number.
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The ten names offered by China are Anemone, Wukong, Jade Rabbit, White Deer, Fengshen, Poseidon, Cuckoo, Electric Mother, Magnolia, Begonia. Many of the typhoon names provided by China are derived from myths and legends. Many typhoons are named after plants and animals, which means a lot.
However, the power of typhoons does not diminish because of a name. If the typhoon is too powerful and causes too much damage to people, people will fall into painful memories when they hear the name again. The Typhoon Committee has stipulated that if a typhoon causes significant damage, its name can be removed from the typhoon list.
China's named Typhoon Longwang made landfall on the southeast coast, causing heavy economic losses and human trouble**. "Dragon King" was removed from the list of typhoons, and then China replaced "Dragon King" with "Anemone".
Typhoon nomenclature is also known as the tropical cyclone naming system of the Northwest Pacific and the South China Sea, also known as the tropical cyclone naming system, and a typhoon refers to a grade of tropical cyclones in the Northwest Pacific and the South China Sea. Many typhoons are born every year, and smart people name them separately, and 140 names from 14 member states and regions of the Asia-Pacific region to which the World Meteorological Organization belongs make up the typhoon family tree. These names are repeated year after year, and if a typhoon is too late to cause a major disaster, they will be removed and the country that provided the original name will provide a new name in the hope of reducing the disaster and bringing well-being to Kuanbendli.
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The 30th meeting of the Typhoon Committee of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), held in Hong Kong from 25 November to 1 December 1997, decided that tropical cyclones in the Northwest Pacific and the South China Sea should be named in the Asian style, and that the new nomenclature would be introduced from 1 January 2000.
There are a total of 140 names in the naming list, which are provided by 14 member countries and regions in the Asia-Pacific region under the World Meteorological Organization: Cambodia, China, North Korea, Hong Kong, Japan, Laos, Macao, Malaysia, Micronesia, the Philippines, South Korea, Thailand, the United States, and Vietnam, so as to facilitate the people of all countries to prevent disasters and strengthen international and regional cooperation. It is then recycled and reused in sequence year after year.
Of the 140 typhoon names proposed by the 14 members, 10 were proposed by each country and region.
The 10 proposed by China are: the Dragon King (later replaced by the "Anemone"), Wukong, Jade Rabbit, Haiyan, Fengshen, Poseidon, Cuckoo, Electric Mother, Seahorse and Begonia.
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What is the name of the typhoon, it doesn't make much sense. The size of the typhoon, what to name a typhoon? It doesn't make any sense.
In order to distinguish the different typhoons, it is necessary to give them separate names. In a word, it is easy to identify, easy to promote wind prevention, and easy to distinguish typhoons that are not used! The name of the typhoon is chosen by each country, and it is used in turn, and if there is a typhoon that causes huge loss of life or property, the name will be banned...
For example, the name of the Dragon King Typhoon was banned and could no longer be used.
In order to distinguish the different typhoons, it is necessary to give them separate names. At first, it was distinguished by latitude and longitude, which was very cumbersome. There are almost 140 names in the typhoon naming list, which are submitted by different countries and recycled after being approved by the relevant authorities.
Do you think the typhoon should have a name? Of course, it's convenient to have names, and since it's time for them, 14 countries in Southeast Asia all give names to typhoons, but the names are not uniform back then, and each country has a different name, and then the International Weather Office has 14 countries in Asia to start together, and then the 14 countries have 10 in each, a total of 140, and the typhoon names rotate until the 140 names are used up, and they start again, and if the typhoon is very destructive, then that name will be canceled and a new one will be added.
The names of typhoons are proposed by the countries or regions concerned, and the names given to them are the names of people, plants, etc., and most of them have the meaning of elegance and peace. Typhoons in Asia are named by coastal countries in turn, usually after the country's mythological characters or flowers! And the American side is called a hurricane!
In fact, in the past, the names of typhoons were taken by each country, and the same typhoon would be called differently in different countries, and in order to facilitate exchanges between countries, the Asia-Pacific Council and the World Typhoon Committee of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) have specially formulated a naming rule for typhoons.
The naming of the typhoon is first determined by the World Meteorological Organization, which is the number one typhoon of that year, and then the meteorological organization of the country or region through which the typhoon passed through proposes a national name and finally naming it. An organization co-founded by the countries affected by the typhoon, in which a certain country names a typhoon in a certain order, is different, and it is all very good.
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Because each typhoon experiences a different typhoon, and each typhoon causes a different degree of economic damage, it is necessary to name the typhoon to make it easier to distinguish it.
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The main reason is that it is very helpful for future development after naming it in this way, and it can also record these names in the record, so that they will not be confused, every typhoon event that occurs.
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These are not names, these are just typhoon numbers, which are used by people to record the weather and also to distinguish the outbreak of typhoons.
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140 typhoon names, provided by 11 member countries and 3 regions in the Asia-Pacific region under the World Meteorological Organization, and 10 names proposed by Chinese mainland: Anemone, Wukong, Jade Rabbit, White Deer, Fengshen, Poseidon, Azalea, Electric Mother, Magnolia, Begonia.
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The main reasons for naming typhoons are: first, typhoons are harmful and need to be paid enough attention to; Second, typhoons have a long life history, and multiple typhoons often appear on the sea surface at the same time, 140 typhoon names, respectively provided by 11 member countries and 3 regions in the Asia-Pacific region under the World Meteorological Organization, and 10 names proposed by Chinese mainland: Anemone, Wukong, Jade Rabbit, White Deer, Fengshen, Poseidon, Rhododendron, Electric Mother, Magnolia, Begonia.
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Among the 140 typhoons to China, 30 are named by our country, including 10 in Hong Kong, China, 10 in China, and 10 in Macau, including Poseidon, Wukong, White Deer, Seahorse, Rhododendron, Fengshen, Jade Rabbit, Anemone, Electric Mother, and Begonia.
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