Not usually. Some tornadoes have skipping paths, but the touchdowns usually occur along a relatively straight line. Some accounts of tornadoes "skipping" in which a tornado contains multiple vortices inside the main vortex. This can result in a wide swath of moderate damage with smaller areas of severe damage. In other cases, accounts of tornadoes skipping may actually be the result of one thunderstorm spawning several tornadoes.
They usually don't exactly skip. There are several factors that may create the appearance of this. Tornadoes fluctuate in intensity. Some tornadoes have smaller, more intense vorticies in side the main circulation. These vorticies can produce very narrow swaths of more intense damage. Some tornadoes have very narrow damage paths. The quality of a building's construction can affect how much damage it takes.
Some tornadoes do seem to have skipping damage paths. In other cases a tornado may contain multiple, short-lived subvortices that result in the severity of the damage being erratic. Sometimes it can be difficult to determine if damage was produced by a single tornado that skipped or several tornadoes that formed in succession.
Not really, no.
run
Yes!
You can skip them by pressing the Start button.
Tornadoes are not alive so you can't really say whether they survive or not.
Tornadoes happen all around the world and it depend on your location as to how many tornadoes you will have.
Well, you can't skip a grade unless your really extremely smart.
Not really. Although hurricanes and tornadoes have some notable similarities, they are completely different phenomena. It is not uncommon for hurricanes to produce tornadoes, but most tornadoes are not a result of hurricanes.
Sort of. There are firewhirls, vortices of smoke of fire that resemble tornadoes. However, they technically are not tornadoes and have more in common with dust devils.
Not really. Although tornadoes can hit Tuscon, it is unusual and tornadoes stronger than EF1 are rare in Arizona.