Tornadoes do not have names. They may be referred to by where they occur (e.g. the Oklahoma City tornado) but these aren't official. Tornadoes are classified on the Enhanced Fujita scale based on the severity of the damage they cause.
The ground.
No. Tornadoes do not have names.
Yes... It's a Tornado, but the difference of a waterspout hits a body of water. And a Tornado hits a body of land.
Unlike hurricanes, tornados are not named.
no not like hurricanes tornadoes get named the place where it touchdown like the hallam nebraska tornado or the tri state tornado
An F4 or higher tornado (the only higher rating being F5) is classified as violent.
Either the funnel cloud or the violent, rotating winds associated with it must reach the ground in order to be classified as a tornado.
The first documented use of the word "tornado" was in 1556.
Tornado Alley is named as such because it has the highest incidence of tornadoes in the world.
Tornadoes are not named as hurricanes are. The first known use of the word "tornado" was in 1556.
tornadoes are not like hurricanes they dont get named they only get named by the place where the tornado touch down like for example the hallam nebraska tornado or the tri state tornado
Tornadoes are not named.
A Tornado to happen and then it is named after the person that reports it first :-)
The ground.
I believe they named the dog "Tornado."
That is classified
There was never a tornado named Bill as tornadoes do not have names. Two hurricanes named Bill occurred in 2003 and 2015.