It could rather be god or jesus,it depends what kind of storm it is tho
No, lightning does not come up from the ground during a thunderstorm. Lightning typically originates from the clouds and strikes downward towards the ground.
Tornadoes come from the energy released in a thunderstorm. As powerful as they are, tornadoes account for only a tiny fraction of the energy in a thunderstorm.
Yes. Tornadoes form from the clouds of a thunderstorm.
Thunderstorm and lightning
When you find a thunderstorm on a route, tornadus will be there. It is a roaming Pokemon, so it changes all the time.
The fuel of a tornado is the warm, moist air that powers its parent thunderstorm.
Yes, "thunderstorm" is a compound word as it is composed of two individual words, "thunder" and "storm," that come together to create a single word with a specific meaning.
A thunderstorm does not strike anything, it is "lightening" that does that.
Yes. The vast majority of people in the world have experienced thunderstorms and come out completely unscathed.
No. It is the other way around. However, only some tornadoes are formed by hurricanes. Tornados are tiny funnels that spin far faster than hurricanes, but hurricane are hundreds of times larger. TORNADOS ARE NOT CYCLONES. don't get confused between the two.
The cumulus stage, in which the thunderstorm develops, the mature stage, in which the thunderstorm is most intense, and the dissipating stage, in which the thunderstorm declines and ends.
Yes, tornadoes can be caused by thunderstorms. Specifically, tornadoes can form within supercell thunderstorms, which are intense rotating thunderstorms that have the potential to produce tornadoes due to the combination of wind shear and instability in the atmosphere.