Yes. A tornado is essentially a very strong vortex of wind.
The speed of the winds in a tornado is called the tornado's wind speed. It is usually measured using the Enhanced Fujita (EF) scale, which categorizes tornadoes based on the estimated wind speed. The wind speed can vary greatly depending on the tornado's intensity, with stronger tornadoes having faster wind speeds.
This condition is called wind shear. It is indeed a crucial factor in producing tornadoes.
blow, gust, zephyr, breeze and air are all synonyms of wind.
It slowly weathers rock and land forms. Hot wind and cold wind can cause tornadoes and can wreck natural resources. Wind can also cause sandstorms in the desert or blow tumbleweeds in Texas. Wind can do many things.
A tornado is a vortex of wind. Tornadoes develop from interactions of air currents (wind) within a thunderstorm.
Very rarely. Most tornadoes in the northern hemisphere, over 99%, spin counterclockwise. A very small percentage of tornadoes in the northern hemisphere, called anticyclonic tornadoes, spin clockwise. Most tornadoes in the southern hemisphere spin clockwise.
Tornadoes are not controlled. Tornadoes are influenced by temperature, humidity, wind, and air pressure, wind interact in complex ways.
The wind began to blow The wind is the subject began to blow is the predicate
sand dunes important in tornadoes as when the tornadoes come the high pressure wind take it to the direction where the wind is blowing
Tornadoes...
The pressure of the sun causes the wind to blow.
Let the Wind Blow was created in 1967.