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Tornadoes are produced by very strong thunderstorms. So aside from the obvious thunder and lightning tornadoes are often accompanied by heavy rain (though often in a different portion of the storm), hail, and strong straight-line winds.
Blizzards - a strong, very cold wind accompanied by widespread and very heavy snow
It is typically a very strong sea breeze, accompanied by very heavy rains.
Tornadoes are accompanied by rain, but they do not produce it themselves. Rather, the rain is a product of the thunderstorm that spawned the tornado. Hurricanes produce very heavy rain.
drizzle is very light rain and well heavy rain, is well, heavy
Hurricanes produces very heavy rain, which is why flooding is a major concern when they hit.
Yes it does rain - sometimes very heavy.
Yes. Hurricanes produce very heavy rain.
It is possible, though the tornado itself would not be the cause. Tornadoes are often accompanied by very heavy rain which can cause flooding. A flood can alter the course of a river.
Hurricanes produce very heavy rain, enough to pose a very serious flooding risk. The rain is shredded into smaller droplest by the powerful winds and appear to move in an almost horizontal direction. Heavy rain, often accompanied by hail, generally prececes a tornado, but often stops before the tornado hits. The tornado itself is often in a rain-free portion of a thunderstorm. However, some tornadoes are rain-wrapped. The rain can range anywhere from a drizzel to a torrential downpour that blocks the tornado from view.
Florida does not have monsoon winds. Monsoon winds and rainy seasons only occur in south east Asia. The winds are very strong and the rain is heavy.
A period of heavy rain can drop rain on an area faster than drainage systems and streams can carry it away.