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A tornado produces a funnel-shaped cloud.
Tornadoes typically have funnel clouds.
A tornado is formed from storm clouds. The funnel cloud is the tornado before it touches down.
A large, rotating tropical storm in the Pacific Ocean would be a typhoon, but typhoons to not have funnel clouds. A funnel cloud anywhere is simply a funnel cloud.
A tornado.
A tornado produces a funnel-shaped cloud.
No. Tornadoes are typically column of funnel shaped.
A tornado
TORNADO
It is a tornado BUT it is funnel shaped NOT an "inverted funnel" The other rotating destructive wind phenomena is not part of a storm (they usually happen on clear, hot days) and is called a whirlwind.
Signs of a potential tornado include rotation in the clouds, a persistent lowering of the cloud base, and a hole opening up in the clouds near the back of a storm (these are all potential precursors). Other signs include a funnel or con shaped extension of the cloud base, and swirling debris on the ground, indicating that a tornado or funnel cloud has formed.
A lopta storm
That would most likely be a tornado, but winds usually aren't so fast.
Tornadoes typically have funnel clouds.
No, funnels are associated with tornadoes, not hurricanes.
No, but it does have a famous storm system called the "Great Red Spot".
A tornado is formed from storm clouds. The funnel cloud is the tornado before it touches down.