You are more likely to be hit in Oklahoma, which has the highest number of tornadoes per square mile.
Tornadoes are most common in the central and eastern parts of Mississippi. The frequency of strong tornadoes in those areas rivals that in parts of Tornado Alley.
Oklahoma has no shoreline. It's land locked. Go look at a freakin map.
Usually, but not always. Large tornadoes are usually more intense than strong ones. Many EF3 and stronger tornadoes are a quarter mile wide or more, but it is unusual to see EF0 and EF1 tornadoes that large. Regardless of strength a large tornado is likely to cause more damage simply because it covers a larger area.
Grammatically - 'twice as likely' is the correct form.
It is more LIKELY to have a likely event than a UNLIKELY event.
Oklahoma is more likely to have a tornado. Although New York does get tornadoes Oklahoma has them far more frequently.
oklahoma
A tornado is most likely to happen in the United States in a section called "Tornado Alley". This includes Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas, Nebraska, North and South Dakota, Florida, Missouri, and more. A tornado is likely to form between 3 pm. and 9 pm.
Simply put, Texas is much bigger, and therefore has more areas for tornadoes to hit.
Kansas. It has the third highers number of tornadoes in the U.S. after Texas an Oklahoma. Rhode Island has the second lowest number of tornadoes.
It is difficult to say definitively, but a good candidate for the largest recorded tornado in Texas is the Glazier-Higgins-Woodward tornado which devastated towns in Texas an Oklahoma on April 9, 1947. At times it was reported to be well over two miles wide.
Texas has the most tornadoes of any U.S. state.
The tornado that hit Glazier, Texas on April 9, 1947 killed 17 people in that town. However, the same tornado went on to strike several more towns, most notably Woodward, Oklahoma. In all, it killed 181 people.
There are quite a few but I'd say the main ones would be; Oklahoma, Texas, and Kansas. You can Google it for more answers.
"Tornado Alley" in the US records more tornadoes than anywhere else on earth. The core extends from northern Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas, into Nebraska.
The state that has more land is Texas.
Simply put, Texas is bigger. Oklahoma actually has a higher concentration of tornadoes, but Texas is several times the size of Oklahoma, so there is more area for tornadoes to hit.