Tornadoes are severe wind storms and do not speak, let alone call out a name.
Tornadoes are often called twisters.
Tornadoes in the U.S. are called tornadoes.
Tornadoes are often called twisters. Some people call them cyclones, though this is not a correct name as it already applies to something else.
Tornadoes are often called twisters or funnels. Some people call tornadoes cyclones, but this is incorrect terminology as a cyclone is technically a much larger type of weather event than a tornado.
Tornadoes on water are called waterspouts.
Some people call tornadoes "twisters" but storm chasers rarely, if ever, use that term. Different descriptive terms may be used depending on the tornado's appearance.
Since tornadoes are a form of weather, they are studied by weather scientists. A weather scientist is a meteorologist.
They are called storm chasers.
A twister.
No.
A thunderstorm that produces a tornado is called a tornadic storm. All tornadoes form from thunderstorms.
The scientific name for tornadoes are Cumulonimbus Tuba because Tuba has the same shape as a tornado and Cumulonimbus clouds.