It's the same force that lifts an airplane off the ground. When air has to take a longer route around an object to get to the other side it is kind of "stretched" or "thinned out" (Bernoulli effect) so its pressure is lowered which gives it a "suction" property.
The size of a tornado does not necessarily relate to the destruction it causes. While a large tornado can case damage over a larger area, the damage is not necessarily more severe. However, larger tornadoes do tend to be stronger and thus more destructive. The intensity of a tornado can be assessed based on the severity of the damage it causes. The most severe damage a tornado causes is used to assign a rating on the Enhanced Fujita Scale. Below are the levels on the scale with damage typically associated with that rating. Note that a tornado only needs to cause a small amount of a given type of damage to qualify for a rating. e.g. one house with EF3 damage is enough to rate a tornado EF3. EF0: 65-85 mph. Shingles peeled from roofs, fences blown down, tree limbs broken, weak trees toppled. Very weak structures such as sheds may be destroyed. EF1: 86-110 mph. Roofs of frame houses badly damaged. Windows broken, Trailers overturned and/or badly damaged. Barns destroyed. Poorly secured roofs may be torn off. EF2: 111-135 mph. Roofs torn from well built houses, trailers completely destroyed. Large trees snapped. Cars lifted and tossed. Poorly anchor structures may be shifted. EF3: 136-165 mph. Exterior and possibly interior walls collapsed in well built houses. Large vehicles lifted. Weaker houses and businesses may be leveled. Trees lifted into the air. EF4: 166-200 mph. Well built houses completely leveled. Houses with structural deficiencies swept away. Trees debarked. Asphalt peeled from roads. EF5: over 200 mph. Well built, well anchored houses wiped clean from foundations. Debris broken into small fragments. High rise buildings significantly deformed. Significant ground scouring may occur.
Blown glass was invented in the first century BC in Syria.
There have been two space shuttles that have blown up: Challenger in 1986 and Columbia in 2003. Both tragedies resulted in the loss of all crew members aboard.
That is sand that is blown so much by the wind that you can't see.
Neutron star
of houses
It was the houses of Parliament
fuses are blown, or bulbs are blown
The prepositional phrase in the sentence is "of houses." A prepositional phrase includes a preposition (in this case, "of") and its object (houses). This phrase functions as an adjective, providing more information about the roofs that were blown away.
He did'nt. He was caught
Millions of houses were totally destroyed during World War 2. The causes can vary from tanks ramming into them or bombs being dropped which knocked over or obliterated hundreds of thousands of buildings.
Well, honey, the prepositional phrase in that sentence is "of houses." It's hanging out there, doing its job, giving a little extra information about which roofs were blown away. So, there you have it, prepositional phrases doing their thing in the middle of a tornado.
blown headgasket
99% of the time it is overheating of the engine.
You have a blown head gasket.
Over heating can blow a head gasket
Blown headgasket