The tornado (or more properly, waterspout) was not given a name as tornadoes are not named.
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.
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."
No, Tenerife is not in the southern hemisphere; it is located in the northern hemisphere. It is one of the Canary Islands, which are situated off the northwest coast of Africa. Tenerife lies just north of the Tropic of Cancer, making it part of the northern hemisphere.
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.
Because it says in the name
a tornado?
"The benehaorits (natives of La Palma) gave the name from the words Tene (mountain) and ife (white). Later, after colonisation, the hispanisation of the name resulted in the adding of a letter "r" uniting both words to obtain the name Tenerife as a result." (*Wikipedia)
Another name for a tornado is a twister.
tenerife!
Tornado
Pico del Teide with 3 718 m.
Santa Cruz de Tenerife.
no Tenerife is a small island in Spain.
there are currently 380 hotels in Tenerife
a person from Tenerife is known as a Tenerifian
CV Tenerife was created in 1981.