No. A warning means the storm has formed. A watch means conditions are favorable.
The short answer is no. Or rather a severe storm is a very strong storm. The National Weather Service uses the term "severe" when a thunderstorm produces winds of 59 MPH or greater and/or large hail 3 quarters of an inch in diameter or greater. The National Weather Service usually describes storms as "strong" when they're not quite to those levels but still significant.
No. A watch means conditions are favorable for a storm to occur. A warning means the storm is there/has already formed.
They can produce the fastest winds of any storm on earth and can produce more severe damage, at least on a local scale, than any other storm.
Yes. There are blizzards, snow storms, dust storms, ice storms, tornadoes (though they come from thunderstorms), and cyclones (including hurricanes).
Thunder Storm.... Thunder Storm.... --It's short for thunderstorms.
No. That would be a severe thunderstorm watch. A severe thunderstorm warning means that a severe thunderstorm ha already formed.
A severe storm warning means that severe storms are very possible. However, a warning for severe storms is just to notify people that storms are possible. It does not mean that they will occur indefinitely.
A hurricane They produce STRONG winds, tornadoes, severe thunder storms, ect.
a tornado storm can be formed from a hurricane
No, only a fairly small percentage of severe storms produce torndoes.
True Probably recommended to get inside because what comes along with severe thunder storms...sometimes tornadoes and high winds or damaging hail.
The Winston-Salem are tends to have severe thunderstorms and tornadoes. The area can be extremely humid, which leads to severe storms.
The short answer is no. Or rather a severe storm is a very strong storm. The National Weather Service uses the term "severe" when a thunderstorm produces winds of 59 MPH or greater and/or large hail 3 quarters of an inch in diameter or greater. The National Weather Service usually describes storms as "strong" when they're not quite to those levels but still significant.
Generally, the stronger the storm, the taller it is. Severe storms often have tops over 50,000 feet.
Small area storms formed by the strong upward movement of warm, moist air are called storm surges.
Not exactly. A tropical storm is indeed a kind of storm, but not all storms are tropical storms.
No. A watch means conditions are favorable for a storm to occur. A warning means the storm is there/has already formed.