No. While many hurricanes do produce tornadoes, most tornadoes are the result of storm systems other than hurricanes. Addtionally, the tornadoes that do form in hurricanes usually form along the front part of the storm.
A tornado at sea is not called a "toofan," it is called a waterspout. You may be confusing this with "typhoon" which is a hurricane in the western Pacific Ocean.
It can't. A hurricane can't become a tornado.
No, that would more likely be a hurricane. The largest tornado ever recorded was 4 km wide.
No, a hurricane is a huge storm hundreds of miles wide. A tornado is tiny by comparison.
The duration of Hurricane Ivan tornado outbreak is 48 hours.
The duration of Hurricane Georges tornado outbreak is 144 hours.
a tornado because of when it hit it it keeps going but a hurricane will stop at land
No, a hurricane is not a tornado over water. A tornado and a hurricane are quite different. A hurricane is a large-scale self-sustaining storm pressure system, typically hundreds of miles wide. A tornado is a small-scale vortex dependent on a parent thunderstorm rarely over a mile wide. A tornado on water is called a waterspout.
There is no conflict between a hurricane and a tornado. In fact, hurricanes often produce tornadoes. However, if you were to somehow pitch the force of a hurricane against the force of a tornado, the hurricane would "win" without being significantly affected. Although a tornado can have faster winds than a hurricane, hurricanes are much larger and have several orders of magnitude more energy than a tornado.
Many hurricanes, but not all, produce tornadoes. However, most tornadoes do not come from hurricanes.
Zero. If you are killed in a hurricane, you are already dead, so you can't be killed by a tornado.
Overall a hurricane has much more energy. Mostly because a hurricane is hundreds of times larger than a tornado.