People have slept through tornadoes and have even been killed in their sleep. There is even one reported case of a tornado carrying away a sleeping infant without injuring or waking it.
Both. Most of the death and destruction occur during a tornado, but recovery from a particularly devastating tornado can take months or years.
The Waco, Texas tornado of May 11, 1953 killed 114 people, tying it with the 1902 Goliad tornado as the deadliest tornado in texas history.
The Tri-State tornado killed 71 people in Indiana
No one was injured or killed in the Elie, Manitoba Tornado
As it is during most tornadoes, fear was probably the predominant emotion. Experiencing a tornado was just as terrifying then as it is now.
Generally you don't thrive during a tornado. For most, a tornado is an incredibly frightening experience. Even though most people affected by a tornado will escape without significant physical injury, there will still be the loss of property. Life during and immediately after a tornado could hardly be described as thriving.
people get injured or killed in a tornado whether they were close from the location of tornado or they have poor building anchorage so this poor building will destroy which will hurt or kill the people inside that building.
Quite often, yes.
If there is a tornado happening right at the moment, you probably will be running to saftey/shelter and not packing clothes.
During REM sleep, people seldom dream.
People in tornado-prone areas are taught to be vigilant during stormy weather and to be ready to sake shelter at a moment's notice. Many schools and other facilities practice tornado drills just as they do fire drills.
before a tornado it is usally calm after a strong tornado there is lots of debris and during a tornado there are things flying everywhere