Tornadoes do not get actual names. Tornadoes are usually referred to by where they occur, most often a town that they hit or go near.
Tornadoes are not given names as hurricanes are, but are often referred to by where they hit. So it would be called the Auckland tornado.
The tornado (or more properly, waterspout) was not given a name as tornadoes are not named.
No. No tornado has a name. Every hurricane, gets a name , though, with the exception of one hurricane in 1991 which was simply called "the Perfect Storm."
The scientific name for tornadoes is "tornado." Tornado is the widely accepted term used by meteorologists and scientists to describe a rapidly rotating column of air that extends from a thunderstorm to the ground.
Before it reaches the ground a developing tornado is known as a funnel cloud.
a tornado?
Tornadoes are not given names as hurricanes are, but are often referred to by where they hit. So it would be called the Auckland tornado.
It is called "Tornado"
Another name for a tornado is a twister.
Tornadoes are not given names, hurricanes are. Tornadoes are often referred to by where they occur though. Since the one tornado that occurred in New Jersey in 2010 hit Ocean County you could refer to it as the Ocean County tornado. You could also call it the New Egypt tornado since it occurred near that town.
Tornado
The New Richmond, Wisconsin tornado of 1899 was an F5.
Tony Tornado's birth name is Antnio Vianna Gomes.
I believe they named the dog "Tornado."
Chi Chi Tornado's birth name is Petr Vostrek.
The F5 tornado of 1999 May 3, 1999 does not have a name, nor does any tornado. It is often called the Oklahoma City tornado, the Moore tornado, or the Bridge Creek-Moore tornado in reference to the areas it hit.
The tornado (or more properly, waterspout) was not given a name as tornadoes are not named.