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Hints About Today's NYT Connections Categories on Wednesday, July 3. 1. When you're trying to think of new ideas. 2. Something you can really feel. 3. They all different types of the same thing. 4 ...
Hints About Today's NYT Connections Categories on Sunday, August 4. 1. Nicknames for a young person. 2. Ready and willing to take on a challenge. 3. Two identical letters. 4. Different types of water.
Hints About Today's NYT Connections Categories on Tuesday, July 30. 1. "Awesome". 2. What you might request of someone who's being vague. 3. Someone's talent. 4. Having to do with multiple buildings.
Timeline of the 2014 Atlantic hurricane season. The 2014 Atlantic hurricane season was an event in the annual hurricane season in the north Atlantic Ocean. It featured below-average tropical cyclone activity, [nb 1] with the fewest named storms since the 1997 season. [2] The season officially began on June 1, 2014 and ended on November 30, 2014 ...
The Atlantic hurricane season officially began on June 1, 2014. [12] It was a below average season in which nine tropical cyclones formed. Eight of the nine designated cyclones attained tropical storm status, the fewest since the 1997 Atlantic hurricane season. [17] Of the eight tropical storms, six reached at least Category 1 hurricane intensity.
AVN color loop of Arthur making landfall in Outer Banks on July 4. Hurricane Arthur was the earliest recorded landfalling North Carolina hurricane, [55] coming onshore at 03:15 UTC on July 4. At Cape Lookout, a peak wind gust of 101 mph (163 km/h) and 1-minute maximum sustained winds of 77 mph (124 km/h) were recorded.
Hints About Today's NYT Connections Categories on Tuesday, July 16. 1. Fussy/grumpy. 2. A try or attempt. 3. The beginning of certain titles. 4. They can all share the same first word (AKA first name)
Flooding in Port Arthur from Hurricane Harvey. From 1980 to the present, 81 tropical or subtropical cyclones affected the U.S. state of Texas.According to David Roth of the Weather Prediction Center, a tropical cyclone makes landfall along the coastline about three times every four years, and on any 50 mi (80 km) segment of the coastline a hurricane makes landfall about once every six years.