No, funnels are associated with tornadoes, not hurricanes.
Hurricanes often produce tornadoes at landfall.
Landfalling hurricanes often do produce tornadoes, so yes.
No. A hurricane is a different class of storm from a tornado that operates on a completely different scale.
Yes, and where the funnel meets it is called the eye, and also tornadoes are in funnel shaped too.
Yes
Funnel cloud
A tornado
A tornado.
The funnel cloud turned into a tornado.
a funnel cloud touching the ground is then called a tornado
A funnel shaped cloud is called a funnel cloud. If it touches the ground it is called a tornado.
A tornado produces a funnel-shaped cloud.
Normally not, but typhoons can produce tornadoes which usually do have a funnel shaped cloud.
A funnel shaped cloud.
tornado clouds
No, a tornado is accompanied by such a cloud. Hurricanes generally have ordinary-looking storm clouds if you can see them through the rain.
Most likely it is a funnel cloud. If it touches the ground then it is a tornado.
A tornado.
Tornadoes typically produce a funnel-shaped cloud of condensation.
Funnel cloud
A funnel cloud is a funnel, cone, or trunk shaped cloud that extends downward from the cloud base and rotates. If dust or debris can be seen swirling beneath it, that means a tornado is con the ground. Below are pictures of some funnel clouds.
Cyclone is the most general of these terms. It describes virtually any broad scale low pressure system of which a hurricane is one variety. Tornado, funnel cloud, and hurricane describe much more specific events.