User:Typhoon You-too/Storm names3

<!-- Typhoon Neoguri, also known in the Philippines as Typhoon Perla, is the twenty-first designated tropical depression, twentieth named tropical storm, and tenth typhoon of the 2019 Pacific typhoon season. It formed inside the Philippine Area of Responsibility as a tropical depression on October 15, and lingered in the Philippine Sea before strengthening into a tropical storm on October 18, when the Japan Meteorological Agency named it Neoguri, which means "raccoon dog" in Korea. In which Neoguri was expected to weaken, the system defied all odds by intensifying into a severe tropical storm, and later intensifying into a typhoon, then reached Category 2 typhoon status.

History
A new area of low pressure formed on October 15. Later, the PAGASA classified the system as Tropical Depression Perla, while the Joint Typhoon Warning Center issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert on Perla. On the next day, the JTWC upgraded the system to a tropical depression and designated it 21W. On October 17, the JMA classified Tropical Depression Perla as a tropical storm and named it Neoguri. Later, the PAGASA and JTWC also upgraded Neoguri into a tropical storm, and the storm defied all odds, as it reached Category 2 status, as the system formed an eye despite its midget size.

Current storm information
As of 00:00 UTC October 20, Typhoon Neoguri (Perla) is located near 23.4°N, 127.9°W, also about 241 nmi south of Kadena Air Base. Maximum 10-minute sustained winds are at 75 kn, while maximum 1-minute sustained winds are at 95 kn, with gusts up to 105 kn. The minimum central barometric pressure is 970 hPa, and the system is moving north-northeastward at 10 kn.

For the latest official information, see:


 * JMA's Tropical Cyclone Information on Typhoon 1920 (Neoguri)
 * JTWC's Tropical Cyclone Warning Text on Typhoon 21W (Neoguri)
 * PAGASA's Severe Weather Bulletin on Typhoon Perla (Neoguri)

Effects
Neoguri did not approach any major landmass, but did affect the Japanese' Ryukyu Islands with its trough, even with its midget size.

Other systems

 * Typhoon Ma-on (2004)- a midget category 5 super typhoon which hit the major Japan landmass in 2004.
 * Typhoon Meari (2004)- a midget system that formed before Ma-on.