Unfortunetely there is no real protection from Tornadoes of your land. It depends I guess how much land you have. Say you had 100 Acres, then it would be extremely hard to protect your land. Even still... unless you had a huge bubble put around your house and your land, Tornadoes can rip up everything in their path.
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.
No. The idea that hills stop tornadoes is a myth.
Tornadoes most often form on land, but they can form over water.
They can, but most tornadoes happen on land.
Antarctica is the continent that does not have tornadoes. Tornadoes typically form over land, so the cold and uninhabited nature of Antarctica makes it unlikely for tornadoes to occur there.
Hide in a safe place
Tornadoes, by a considerable amount.
Tornadoes are commonly observed on the Great Plains.
Tornadoes generally form over land and whether they are on land or over water has little effect on their intensity. It is a hurricane that weakens as it hits land.
Tornadoes can cause significant damage to the land by uprooting trees, destroying buildings, and displacing soil. They can also create new land formations, such as debris fields or dunes, through the deposition of materials carried by the tornado. Overall, tornadoes can alter the landscape by reshaping and reconfiguring the land.
No, tornadoes typically form over land in association with thunderstorms. Waterspouts, which are tornadoes that form over water, can occur in tropical oceans under specific conditions, but they are generally much weaker than tornadoes that form over land.
If you can get thunderstorms, you can get tornadoes. However, even if tornadoes are possible in Egypt they, in all likelihood, very rare and any tornadoes that you do get will probably cause only minor damage.