To a point, yes. Storms that develop tornadoes are much more powerful and lower pressure than a "normal" thunderstorm, but both forms could be classified as a thunderstorm.
Yes. In fact thunderstorms are what produce tornadoes.
Thunderstorms and tornadoes, whether they are quick or not, are the product if cumulonimbus clouds.
Tornadoes develop from thunderstorms, which are cumulonimbus clouds.
Tornadoes form in thunderstorms, which are composed of cumulonimbus clouds. Usually a tornado will form from a wall cloud that develops are the based of the cumulonimbus cloud, and will develop from a funnel cloud that comes out of the wall cloud.
True
Tornadoes develop during thunderstorms, which are associated with cumulonimbus clouds. Many will descned from a wall cloud at the base of a thunderstorm. The tornado itself may be visible as a funnel cloud.
Yes. Tornadoes are produced by thunderstorms, which from from cumulonimbus cloud. Usually a wall cloud and then a funnel cloud develop at the base of a cumulonimbus cloud before a tornado touches down.
the weather that cumulonimbus brings is thunderstorms
thunderstorms.
yes
A cumulonimbus cloud
Yes. Tornadoes need thunderstorms to form.
They cannot form without it. Tornadoes are produced by thunderstorms and by definition must connect to the cloud base. Prolonged non convective cloud cover can preven the air near the ground from becoming warm enough to produce thunderstorms and thus tornadoes.