There are tornadoes in New England occasionally.
But the formation of tornadoes is complicated and requires more special conditions than it simply being windy. Specificallym it requires a type of rotating storm called a supercell.
Tornadoes are not given formal names. Some tornadoes are informally for where they hit however, but they are never named in advance.
it comes out on the 18th of Februry in the UK :)
No it does not come from tornadoes . :] .....
Yes. Tornadoes form from the clouds of a thunderstorm.
Benjamin Zephaniah never came to England he was born and raised in England in Handsworth, Birmingham. He was born in April 15 1958!
Generally not, although tornadoes are often produced by landfalling hurricanes, most tornadoes are not associate with hurricanes.
Tornadoes most often come out of the southwest.
Usually one tornado does not result in other tornadoes. Some strong tornadoes can produce a satellite tornadoes that orbit them, but this is not very common.
Tornadoes come from thunderstorms, usually, powerful rotating storms called supercells. However, tornadoes can sometimes form with squall lines, hurricanes, and in rare cases, single cell storms.
Tornadoes come in all seasons but are most common in spring and summer.
The U.S. averages about 1200 tornadoes per year.
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.