Anything - whether it be gas, liquid, solid, light, etc. - can be pulled into a black hole if it gets too close.
A black hole doesn't "suck" things in. It pulls them in with it's immense gravity. In order to suck something in, there must be something to fill in empty space such as air.
they walk around looking for berries and meat.
The air does get sucked upward in a tornado, but a tornado does not create a complete vacuum, if that's what you mean.
if you can find a really strong magnet or a vacuum with a small nozzle to suck air threw and pull it out
Crystals do not have air holes.
well not that much they both spin and that's about it....wat different is that a tornado is sucking in air instead of a black hole it has emense gravity and what goes in a black hole is never seen again and with a tornado is just comes out is maybe a different form (morebeat up)
Black holes might not exist - or at least not as scientists have imagined, cloaked by an impenetrable "event horizon". A controversial new calculation could abolish the horizon, and so solve a troubling paradox in physics.
No, tornadoes do not suck things in. They are powerful rotating columns of air that destroy objects in their path through a combination of strong winds and flying debris. The pressure difference created by the tornado can cause objects to be sucked into the vortex, but the tornado itself does not actively "suck" things in.
The holes may be button holes, air holes, or holes caused by damage to the shirt.
When you breath, you suck in air. There is no air to suck in on the moon - so you can't breath there.
I do not think that there is any link between these whatsoever.
suck air