Yes, take the Empire State Building, it gets hit by lightning hundreds of times a year.
Florida is the hot spot as regards lightning in the U.S. They have more lightning than a body can do, literally and figuratively. And the University of Florida has a group of researchers who are point on as regards investigating lightning. A link is provided.
Yes, lightning can strike the same spot more than once. Tall structures like buildings and trees are often struck repeatedly because they provide a direct path to the ground for the electrical discharge.
lightning is more powerful than air
Twilight has more pages than The Lightning Thief.
Florida has more lightning strikes than any other state.
You can use each lightening bolt only once, but you can use as many bolts on one howrse as you like.
Lightning commonly strikes the same place many times. Lightning is static electricity, generated in the collisions between the clouds. The lightning wants to ground itself by striking something with a good electrical pathway to the earth. That could be a tall tree, or a steeple, or a house chimney, or any tall object that will intercept the lightning strike and bring it to ground. Lightning will strike twice if the same place it struck before is still a good, high, electrical path to the ground, and if no better places have been built.
On average tornadoes kill more people than lightning
lightning
Yes, lightning is two syllabels: light-ning.
Earthquakes have caused more deaths than hurricanes, and hurricanes have caused more deaths than lightning.