Tornadoes not not strike before volcano.
Tornadoes and volcanoes are unrelated.
Yes. Baltimore was hit by an F2 tornado in 1973, an F0 tornado in 1996, an EF1 tornado in 2010, and an EF0 tornado in 2013.
First of all, tornadoes are not quiet. It may be quiet before a tornado hits, but not in the tornado itself. Second, it is impossible to predict when or where the next tornado will hit.
It is impossible to say. Tornadoes have been occurring in the region we call "Tornado Alley" since before people were there to report them.
"A tornado hit the barn." would be a sentence.
It is impossible to make long term predictions for when and where a tornado will occur. At best, we will know about this next tornado a few minutes before it forms.
The tornado may pick up ash and some volcanic rocks, but the volcano would, for the most part, not be affected.
In terms of energy output, a volcano is more powerful.
A funnel volcano is the most common tornado and is what most people think of when you mention a tornado. They are very violent and destroy almost everything in their path.
The tornado would picked up ash and perhaps some loose stone. Vegetation onf the volcano would be damaged. The volcano itself would not be affected in any way worth noting.
There were many tornadoes in Georgia in 2011. The most significant tornado was the tornado that struck the town of Ringgold, Georgia before moving into Tennessee, killing 21 people. The tornado was rated a high-end EF4.
Chicago has been hit by a number of tornadoes. Official records go back as far as 1950. Since then, Chicago itself has been hit by an F2 tornado in March 4, 1961, an F1 tornado on May 29, 1983, and an F0 tornado on September 22, 2006. Even more tornadoes have hit the greater Chicago area. The worst of these was the F4 that hit Oak Lawn on April 21, 1967. Before official records, in 1871 an F3 tornado tore through downtown Chicago.
The Town of Henryville, Indiana was hit by an EF4 tornado on March 2, 2012.