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Tornado intensity is determined by damage, which is used to estimate wind speed. These wind speed estimates are used to sort a tornado into one of six categories from EF0 to EF5.
The tool that is used to monitor tornado activity is the Doppler weather radar.
the noun that pronounce predicate. they used " e or ed"
There is no particular instrument used for measuring tornado intensity. Ratings are based primarily on damage assessment. Occasionally doppler radar has measure wind speeds inside a tornado, but such measurements are rare.
Common terms used to describe a tornado's shape are rope (a very skinny tornado, usually dissipating), elephant trunk, stovepipe (a vertical column), cone, and wedge (a tornado that appears wider than it is tall).
Wall Cloud, Super Cell, Touch down, Tornado Alley, Tornado Warning, Severe are some word you could use ? Just tryin to help !
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"Light damage" is the term used to describe the damage caused by an F0 tornado.
Lexicon or Vocabulary...... idiot!
Talasalitaan is a Filipino term that refers to a glossary or a list of words with their corresponding definitions or meanings. It is commonly used in educational settings to help students understand and learn new vocabulary words.
There are 6 definitions of the English word "fierce." This adjective can be used to describe something of a violent, severe, intense, active, difficult, or threatening nature.
The term may be used to describe a tornado with two visible suction vorticies, or two separate tornadoes on the ground at the same time in the same general area.
The Chart of Accounts is really a list of "descriptions" used to describe the elements and events involved in financial transactions.
That depends, as there is no real definition for a "super tornado" and it is not a term that you will find in any storm expert's vocabulary. If by super tornado you mean an F6 tornado, then no, as such a rating is not and never will be used. A 2004 documentary used ther term supertwister to apply to F4 and F5 tornadoes, of which over a thousand have been recorded since 1900. More of these will inevitably occur. Some tornadoes, such as the Jarrell tornado of 1997 have cause particularly extreme damage. If such tornadoes have happened before, then it is inevitable that they will happen again.
They are used pretty much the same except when "common" is used to describe repetitions over time. They are synonymous terms used in each others definitions.
A story problem has different definitions in mathematics. It can be used to describe a math problem that is written out in text instead of mathematical notation, and it can describe a math problem that has its background details explained in text.