No. Like all forms of stormy weather, tornadoes are associated with low pressure systems.
Hurricanes form over warm ocean water while tornadoes usually form over land.
a land breeeze
Tornadoes usually form on land, but they can form on water in which case they are called waterspouts.
Hurricanes don't actually aim for land. They area around a hurricane has very low pressure. The pressure systems, both high and low, will steer the hurricane. High pressure will keep the hurricane away. Usually, land just gets in the way.
Tornadoes usually form on land, though they can form on water, win which case they are called waterspouts.
Hurricanes form over warm ocean water while tornadoes usually form over land.
Hurricanes develop over warm ocean water. Tornadoes usually form over land.
Tornadoes can form on both land and water, but are most commonly seen on land.
No, tornadoes usually develop over land. Hurricanes develop e over warm water.
They can, but this characteristic so more often associate with hurricanes. Tornadoes usually form over land.
Hurricanes develop over warm ocean water while tornadoes usually form over land.
that they matter to the breezes and one happens at night and the other happens at day
a land breeeze
Tornadoes are generally considered a land based phenomenon. There are however waterspouts which are essentially tornadoes on water, though they are generally not counted as tornadoes unless the hit land.
It is above the land
No. Tornadoes usually form over land, not water, so water temperature isn't really a factor.
No. A tornado that moves onto water will keep going without being significantly affected. In such a case it is called a waterspout. Waterspouts can also develop on water and then move onto land as tornadoes. There are numerous examples of tornadoes crossing water. Most notably, the three deadliest tornadoes in U.S. history all crossed the Mississippi River. See the links below for tornadoes moving across water.