Tornado alley in America :P
Mostly in the summer and in all countries except Antarctica. Australia has the greatest chance of a wildfire
anywhere except Antarctica
a giant tornado kills everyone except the storm thief who steals the tornado
There is not opposite of a tornado, except perhaps a clear day with no wind.
No part of any country is a tornado. A tornado is a weather event, not a place. However all parts of the US can get tornadoes except, perhaps, for northern Alaska.
Tornadoes have been observed and documented on every continent except Antarctica.Since tornadoes require thunderstorms and the conditions in Antarctica pretty much prevent that there is little chance of a tornado in Antarctica.
Most of Oklahoma except part of the panhandle is in Tornado Alley along with large portions of 4 other states.
Except in cases of weak tornadoes, or where a structure is only subjected to the tornado's outermost winds, windows will generally break.
If the tornado is close you probably won't have time to get very far down, so your best bet is probably to get to the center part of the building such as a stairwell. Skyscrapers are very study structures and are unlike to collapse except in the most violent of tornadoes. The greatest danger comes from shattered glass.
If you mean Asia, the answer is yes. All continents except Antarctica get tornadoes.
It depends on the intensity of the tornado. For the weakest and most common category, EF0 there isn't much that it can destroy. For an EF5, there is little that can survive except structures that are designed with EF5 tornadoes in mind. These include closet-sized shelters than can be installed in homes and the reactors of nuclear power plants.
A tornado does not have a spiral shape or appearance (except in some cases where helical subvortices form), but the winds in and near a tornado move in a spiral fashion.