In a sense. Some tornadoes, usually the weaker ones, only touch down intermittently.
The present tense of "hop" is "hop" (I hop, you hop, he/she/it hops).
The future tense of "hop" is "will hop."
Who let the bunnies out? Hop, Hop, Hop, Hop, Hop......
Was the joke this instead? Knock, Knock! Who's there? Hop. Hop who? Hop, Hop, Away. - The Easter Bunny's gone!
Tornadoes in the U.S. are called tornadoes.
hip hop harry sonnn
Tornadoes are sometimes divided into "weak" tornadoes "strong" and "violent" tornadoes. Weak tornadoes are those rated EF0 and EF1. Most tornadoes are weak. Strong tornadoes are those rated EF2 and EF3. Violent tornadoes are those rated EF4 and EF5. They are the rarest of tornadoes, only about 1% of tornadoes are this strong.
It depends on what you mean by extreme. Tornadoes of EF4 and EF5 tornadoes, however are often referred to as violent tornadoes. These account for about 1% of all tornadoes.
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Tornadoes don't get named, Hurricanes do, but Tornadoes don't.