. . . . . . . . . "\u70ED\u5E26\u98CE\u66B4\u5B89\u5A1C\u53EF\u4EE5\u6307\uFF1A \n* 1991\u5E74\u70ED\u5E26\u98CE\u66B4\u5B89\u5A1C\uFF0C1991\u5E74\u5927\u897F\u6D0B\u98D3\u98CE\u5B63\u7684\u4E00\u500B\u70ED\u5E26\u6C14\u65CB\u3002 \n* 2003\u5E74\u70ED\u5E26\u98CE\u66B4\u5B89\u5A1C\uFF0C2003\u5E74\u5927\u897F\u6D0B\u98D3\u98CE\u5B63\u7684\u4E00\u500B\u70ED\u5E26\u6C14\u65CB\u3002 \n* 2009\u5E74\u70ED\u5E26\u98CE\u66B4\u5B89\u5A1C\uFF0C2009\u5E74\u5927\u897F\u6D0B\u98D3\u98CE\u5B63\u7684\u4E00\u500B\u70ED\u5E26\u6C14\u65CB\u3002 \n* \uFF0C2015\u5E74\u5927\u897F\u6D0B\u98D3\u98CE\u5B63\u7684\u4E00\u500B\u70ED\u5E26\u6C14\u65CB\u3002"@zh . "\u70ED\u5E26\u98CE\u66B4\u5B89\u5A1C\u53EF\u4EE5\u6307\uFF1A \n* 1991\u5E74\u70ED\u5E26\u98CE\u66B4\u5B89\u5A1C\uFF0C1991\u5E74\u5927\u897F\u6D0B\u98D3\u98CE\u5B63\u7684\u4E00\u500B\u70ED\u5E26\u6C14\u65CB\u3002 \n* 2003\u5E74\u70ED\u5E26\u98CE\u66B4\u5B89\u5A1C\uFF0C2003\u5E74\u5927\u897F\u6D0B\u98D3\u98CE\u5B63\u7684\u4E00\u500B\u70ED\u5E26\u6C14\u65CB\u3002 \n* 2009\u5E74\u70ED\u5E26\u98CE\u66B4\u5B89\u5A1C\uFF0C2009\u5E74\u5927\u897F\u6D0B\u98D3\u98CE\u5B63\u7684\u4E00\u500B\u70ED\u5E26\u6C14\u65CB\u3002 \n* \uFF0C2015\u5E74\u5927\u897F\u6D0B\u98D3\u98CE\u5B63\u7684\u4E00\u500B\u70ED\u5E26\u6C14\u65CB\u3002"@zh . . . . "The name Ana has been used for eleven tropical cyclones worldwide: eight in the Atlantic Ocean, one in the Central Pacific Ocean, one in the South Pacific, and one in the South-West Indian Ocean. It has also been used for two extratropical European windstorms. In the Atlantic: In the Central Pacific: \n* Hurricane Ana (2014), brought heavy rain to the Hawaiian Islands In the South Pacific: \n* Cyclone Ana (2021), brought flooding to portions of Fiji In the South-West Indian: \n* Tropical Storm Ana (2022), crossed northern Madagascar, causing severe flooding, and then made landfall in Mozambique"@en . "Tempestade tropical Ana"@pt . . . . . "Tormenta tropical Ana"@es . . . "1121092913"^^ . . . "1786"^^ . . . "The name Ana has been used for eleven tropical cyclones worldwide: eight in the Atlantic Ocean, one in the Central Pacific Ocean, one in the South Pacific, and one in the South-West Indian Ocean. It has also been used for two extratropical European windstorms. In the Atlantic: \n* Tropical Storm Ana (1979), formed east of the Lesser Antilles and crossed Leeward Islands \n* Tropical Storm Ana (1985), curved around Bermuda and neared Newfoundland, but dissipated offshore \n* Tropical Storm Ana (1991), paralleled the East Coast of the United States before moving out to sea \n* Tropical Storm Ana (1997), formed off the coast of the Carolinas and moved northeastward away from land \n* Tropical Storm Ana (2003), pre-season storm that moved generally eastward across the central Atlantic \n* Tropical Storm Ana (2009), which crossed the Leeward Islands and dissipated near Puerto Rico \n* Tropical Storm Ana (2015), pre-season storm that made landfall in South Carolina \n* Tropical Storm Ana (2021), pre-season storm that churned in the open ocean In the Central Pacific: \n* Hurricane Ana (2014), brought heavy rain to the Hawaiian Islands In the South Pacific: \n* Cyclone Ana (2021), brought flooding to portions of Fiji In the South-West Indian: \n* Tropical Storm Ana (2022), crossed northern Madagascar, causing severe flooding, and then made landfall in Mozambique In Europe: \n* Storm Ana (2017), impacted much of Western Europe and Scandinavia. \n* Storm Ana (2022), impacted Italy.This article includes a list of named storms that share the same name (or similar names). If an internal link incorrectly led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended storm article."@en . . "Cyclone tropical Ana"@fr . . . . . . . . . . . . "1838945"^^ . . "List of storms named Ana"@en . "\u70ED\u5E26\u98CE\u66B4\u5B89\u5A1C"@zh .