They can do various levels of damage. It does not matter whether or not there are people in the house.
The weakest of tornadoes will strip away some siding and shingles while the very strongest can essentially wipe a house from existence, leaving nothing but a bare foundation.
it kills people, destroys houses, crops, plants etc..
Debris, wood and brick from houses, people, trees, water. Anything that the tornado is strong enough to carry.
of houses
Alot..people lose their houses....and even die!
Tornadoes can destroy as much houses as it can depending on the length of their path. Most tornadoes are too weak to destroy houses, causing mostly superficial damage. However, in the works cases a tornado can destroy thousands of houses.
No, houses are more likely to be damaged by the strong winds and flying debris associated with a tornado rather than from the low air pressure. Most houses are not airtight enough for the pressure differences caused by a tornado to make them explode.
Many areas conduct tornado drills so that people know what to do when one strikes. Towns in tornado prone areas have sirens that go off if a tornado is in the area. Some people have installed storm shelters in or near their houses and in trailer parks..
The Tri-State tornado destroyed about 15,000 homes.
Example: A tornado can knock over houses and spoil towns and villages.
On its own, tornado is simply a noun. As with any noun, whether it is the subject or the object depends on how it is used in the sentence. In this sentence, "tornado" is the subject while "houses" is the object: "The tornado destroyed several houses." In this one, "tornadoes" is the object: "I saw a tornado."
No. The pressure drop inside a tornado is not large enough for this to happen. Tornadoes tear houses apart with the power of their wind.
Cataclysmic tornado trampling everything in its pathCatastrophic, towering tornado overwhelming the small townTurbulent tornado, tossing houses like twigs