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#1
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to me that is the most idiotic thing.
why don't they just refer to them by a time and intensity nomanclature? Like instead of calling it katrina or Rita, which sounds like cute little girls, why not the hurricane SEsummer05 Now they are saying they are running out of names to give these storms,.... And why arent tornados or earthquakes given names. Maybe there is a rationale behind it so i'm all ears.. |
#2
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It's nicer to get killed by something with a name. More personal that way.
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#3
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[ QUOTE ]
why don't they just refer to them by a time and intensity nomanclature? [/ QUOTE ]Intensities change. And, sometimes there is more than one hurricane (or tropical storm) active. For instance, right now tropical storm Philippe and hurricane Rita are both in the North Atlantic. Names are re-used, except for a few that have been retired. I don't imagine there's really danger of running out of names any time soon. |
#4
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why are they always girls names then?
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#5
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why are they always girls names then? [/ QUOTE ] Because when they arrive, they're wet and wild, but when they go, they take your house and car. |
#6
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nh
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#7
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Because when they arrive, they're wet and wild, but when they go, they take your house and car. [/ QUOTE ] ROTFLMFAO!!!!! And sometimes they get you all hot and bothered in anticipation only to turn into a complete bluff. [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img] |
#8
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Charley hit Florida last year. Andrew hit in 1992. Hugo in 1989. Maybe they were transgendered hurricanes?
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#9
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why are they always girls names then? [/ QUOTE ] I thought every 5 year old was taught how they names Hurricanes...they alternate between boy and girl names. So Hurricane A is a boy, Burricane B is a Girls, Hurricane C is a Boy etc,etc. This very well might have been sarcasm in which case ignore post above. |
#10
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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE , NOAA, National Weather Service Experience shows that the use of short, distintive given names in written as well as spoken communications is quicker and less subject to error than the older more cumbersome latitude-longitute identification methods. These advantages are specially important in exchanging detailed storm information between hundres widely scattered stations, coastal bases, and ships at sea. The use of easily remembered names greatly reduces confusion when two or more tropical storms occur at the same time. For example, one hurricane can be moving slowly westward in the Gulf of Mexico , while at exactly the same time anothe hurricane can be moving rapidly Northward along the Atlantic coast. In the past, confusion and false rumors have arisen when storm advisories broadcast from radio statio were mistaken for warning concerning an entirely different storm located hundreds of miles away. [/ QUOTE ] http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/general/lib/reason.html |
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