In Spanish, the word for tornado is "tornado". Same as in English, but pronounced a little differently (torr-nawh-do instead of the English way torr-nay-do).
As for earthquake, the spanish word for it is "terremoto".
Terremoto.
No, tornadoes are triggered by interactions of air currents, which are essentially unaffected by earthquakes.
Lightning frequently accompanies tornadoes anyway. On the unlikely even that a tornado occurred during an earthquake, there would probably be more damage than either of the two could do on their own.
boo
The seismic waves of an earthquake travel faster than the winds of a tornado. But this is not what makes earthquakes destructive.
"twister" translates to, "tornado" in Spanish.
Terremoto.
earthquake
It isn't. An earthquake releases far more energy than a tornado.
Yes. The word 'tornado' is originally Spanish.
In terms of energy output an earthquake is stronger.
Spanish cruiser Tornado was created in 1863.
disastrous as an earthquake/tornado...
there are no benefits to any disaster like a tornado or earthquake or floods.
3 major earthquakes and 3 tornadoes were recorded in 1925. They were: The 1925 Dali earthquake, the Charlevoix-Kamouraska earthquake and the Santa Barbra earthquake. The 1925 Miami tornado, the Southern Illinois tornado and the Tri-State tornado.
"Tornado" in Spanish is the same as in English, "tornado". An alternative, "torcedor" (meaning "twister"), can be used.
a hurricane or a 10. earthquake