Well, up to 100 tornadoes, can strike a large region not at the minute, but in a day or 2. It would be unusual for more than two tornadoes to strike an area as small as a city within a day end even more if they were simultaneous. Tornadoes are usually not very stable in close proximity to one another and will tend to merge together.
4 tornadoes can happen at once. In one case a storm chase found himself surrounded by six tornadoes at one time.
Lightning not only can strike the same place twice, it frequently does.
Many people (not necessarily scientiest or meteorologists) think that lightning will not strike the same place twice. So they say that it is rare for lightning to strick twice, meaning twice at the same place. This term is used to imply something that is rare.
Yes, they can.
It is very rare for a tornado to hit the same place twice, however it does happen. A great example of this is Guy, Arkansas. It was here that a church was hit by three tornadoes within a twenty-four hour period.
Lightning can (and sometimes does) strike twice in the same place. it usually strikes three times in the same place it just apears to be one.
Yes
Yes. In some of the most intense outbreaks there have been over a dozen tornadoes on the ground at the same time, though not in the same place.
Only one. Like many things, no two tornadoes are exactly alike.
Only once. After that, the place is no longer there. No, seriously, lightning may strike the same place many times. Some places are just natural lightning rods, like radio antennas on tall buildings. outcroppings of rock on mountains -- any place that a static charge is able to build uninterrupted.
In a few cases there have been as many as 13 tornadoes on the ground at the same time in different locations.
It is unlikely that two tornadoes could maintain such high intensity so close to each other.
It is just another myth