No. Tornadoes cover small areas, and if a tornado is coming there usually isn't time to evacuate.
They know cause they'd be flying.
No country really calls a cyclone a tornado. Some parts of the U.S. a tornado a cyclone, though a tornado and a cyclone are two different things. In the U.S. however a strong tropical cyclone is called a hurricane.
No country does. A suction vortex is not a tornado; it is a feature that can develop in a tornado. A tornado itself is a vortex but can sometimes contain smaller vortices (vortexes) called suction vortices. Such a storm is called a multiple-vortex tornado.
No. A tornado is just as dangerous in open country as it is in a town or city.
Bangladesh
Texas
Texas
No. Tornadoes do not get names. However, currently, as of October 28, 2012 there is a Hurricane Sandy.
=It originated in America.=
Tornado Alley is a region in the central United States that includes parts of Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, and South Dakota. This area is known for its frequent and powerful tornado occurrences due to the clash of warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico and cold, dry air from the Rocky Mountains.
A very small country perhaps. In rare cases a tornado may travel over 100 miles, which is enough to cross some countries.
i think theres a country called Georgia