Probably not. Although we cannot be certain how the world will end, the most likely scenario appears to be that the sun will gradually increase in brightness over the next few hundred million years, eventually stripping away most of the atmosphere.
until the tornado ends and then the people fall and die or get injured
How a tornado ends is not fully understood. It is thought, however, that cold air coming out of a thunderstorm (called outflow) undercuts the mesocyclone, the rotating updraft that drives the tornado. This chokes off the supply of warm air that feeds the updraft.
tornado
The longest tornado in the world happened in the U.S. in 1925.
The longest-lived and farthest traveling tornado was the world in the US, but not in the world. It was the Tri-State tornado of March 18, 1925, which hit portions of Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana. The worst tornado on record in the world was the Daulatpur-Saturia tornado, which struck central Bangladesh on April 26, 1989.
No. A tornado only affects a relatively small area.
The most recent tornado in the world is the outbreak (so far) is in the USA in most of May.
mostly in America the tri state tornado but most part of the world it is the Daulatapur Salturia Bangladesh tornado
The Daulatpur-Saturia tornado of Bangladesh is the deadliest tornado in world history, with a death toll of about 1,300.
Don't worry. When the world ends, you are dead.
When the world ends, you will die.
The World Ends with You happened in 2007.