No. Extremely heavy objects are unlikely to be lifted in even the most violent tornadoes. Most tornadoes are not particularly destructive, and only lift relatively light objects.
Yes, a tornado can suck up objects due to the strong updrafts inside the funnel cloud. Debris and objects can be lifted into the rotating column and carried along with the swirling winds, causing damage and potentially danger to surrounding areas.
A black hole will "suck things up" for the same reason that the Sun, or Jupiter, or Earth, "suck things up", although I would prefer the term "attracts things gravitationally". All those objects attract things thanks to their gravitational attraction - this, in turn, is related to its mass, i.e., more massive objects have a larger gravitational attraction.
Vacuum.
Plants have these things called roots that suck up all kinds of stuff.
Most tornadoes cannot "suck up" much more than small objects. Tornadoes can suck in and lift objects as the low pressure pulls air inward at great speed. In the tornado air then travels upward rapidly, often carrying some objects with it.
No, tornadoes do not suck in things like a vacuum. Tornadoes are powerful rotating columns of air, and they primarily cause damage through the strong winds and intense rotation. However, their winds can pick up and transport objects, including debris, which can then be thrown by the tornado or scattered downstream.
A tornado can cause significant damage by generating extremely strong winds that can destroy buildings, uproot trees, and toss objects like debris and vehicles. It can also create a vacuum effect that can suck up and carry away objects in its path.
If it is a very large one, most likely not. However, a strong enough tornado could cause a concrete dome to collapse.
You can't stop a tornado unless you're all powerful... but there is something you can do to stop yourself from feeling gulity because you didn't try and stop the tornado. Let it suck you up and make sure you die too. You won't have to worry about not trying to stop the tornado.
Tornadoes do not suck people up. They have strong, rotating winds that can lift objects like debris, vehicles, and sometimes people into the air due to the high wind speeds and low pressure within the tornado.
In a tornado, unlike in other wind storms, air travel upward as well as horizontally. This allows a tornado to lift objects into the air. Sometimes to great heights. Unlike other major wind events, where wind is mostly horizontal, the wind in a tornado has a vertical component as it spirals upward rapidly. This upward-moving wind can carry objects with it.
Yes. Tornadoes have been known to lift houses into the air. It usually takes a very strong tornado to do so, generally of F4 or F5 intensity.