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* [[Tropical Storm Fung-wong (2014)]] (T1416, 16W, Mario) – struck Philippines, Taiwan and Eastern China |
* [[Tropical Storm Fung-wong (2014)]] (T1416, 16W, Mario) – struck Philippines, Taiwan and Eastern China |
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* [[Tropical Storm Fung-wong (2019)|Severe Tropical Storm Fung-wong (2019)]] (T1927, 28W, Sarah) – churned out of the ocean |
* [[Tropical Storm Fung-wong (2019)|Severe Tropical Storm Fung-wong (2019)]] (T1927, 28W, Sarah) – churned out of the ocean |
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* [[2025 Pacific typhoon season#Typhoon Fung-wong (Uwan)|Typhoon Fung-wong (2025)]] (T2526, 32W, Uwan) – a very large Category 4 typhoon that |
* [[2025 Pacific typhoon season#Typhoon Fung-wong (Uwan)|Typhoon Fung-wong (2025)]] (T2526, 32W, Uwan) – a very large Category 4 typhoon that Aurora, Philippines, currently active |
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Revision as of 12:52, 9 November 2025
Fung-wong may refer to four tropical cyclones in the Pacific Ocean. The name, contributed by Hong Kong, refers to Lantau Peak (Phoenix Mountain), the highest point in Hong Kong’s Lantau Island. The name is also the Cantonese pronunciation and romanization of the word for the Chinese phoenix (鳳凰, fènghuáng).
- Typhoon Fung-wong (2002) (T0211, 15W, Kaka) – recurved out of the ocean
- Typhoon Fung-wong (2008) (T0808, 09W, Igme) – struck Taiwan and China
- Tropical Storm Fung-wong (2014) (T1416, 16W, Mario) – struck Philippines, Taiwan and Eastern China
- Severe Tropical Storm Fung-wong (2019) (T1927, 28W, Sarah) – churned out of the ocean
- Typhoon Fung-wong (2025) (T2526, 32W, Uwan) – a very large Category 4 typhoon that struck Aurora, Philippines, currently active


