If there person is speaking English, they will simply be called tornadoes. Otherwise, what they are called depends on the language. In Japanese, for example, they are called tatsumaki, while in Chinese they are lóngjuǎnfēng.
Yes, tornadoes do occur in the eastern hemisphere. Countries such as Bangladesh, Australia, and parts of Europe and Asia experience tornadoes, although they may be less frequent and less intense than in the United States.
People who study tornadoes are a type of meteorologist.
Afghanistan is a landlocked country located in Central Asia, so hurricanes are not a threat. Tornadoes can occur very rarely in Afghanistan, but they are not common due to the country's mountainous terrain and climate.
They are called tornadoes. Tornadoes are violent rotating columns of air that extend from a thunderstorm to the ground.
A group of tornadoes produced by the same storm system withing a day or so is called a tornado outbreak. A series of tornadoes produced in succession by the same supercell is called a tornado family.
Yes. Every continent has tornadoes except Antarctica.
Tornadoes are sometimes called twisters.
Tornadoes in the United States are simply called tornadoes. In informal contexts they are sometimes called twisters.
Tornadoes in the U.S. are called tornadoes.
Tornadoes are sometimes called twisters, but tornado is the preferred scientific term.
Tornadoes are formally called tornadoes.
Smaller tornadoes near a larger tornadoes are often called satellite tornadoes. Smaller vortices within a tornado are called subvorticies or suction vorticies.
Tornadoes are often called twisters.
Yes. Tornadoes occur on all continents except Antarctica. The world's deadliest tornado was one that struck Bangladesh in 1989.
Enormous vortices have been observed on the sun that resemble tornadoes. They have been called "solar tornadoes" but they are not tornadoes by the meteorological definition.
If you mean Asia, the answer is yes. All continents except Antarctica get tornadoes.
Sometimes tornadoes are called tornadoes, though it is technically incorrect to do so.