That varies. If you are close enough to be in the area of the tornado's inflow then the wind will blow almost directly towards the tornado, perhaps a little to the right of that direction. In that case the wind direction will depend on where the tornado is relative to you.
If you are beyond the inflow area for the tornado, then nothing about the wind direction would indicate the approaching tornado.
Wind direction is the direction which the wind comes from.
The wind doth blow and we shall have destruction
A NW wind blows from the Northwest towards the South Eas
A west wind blows FROM the west.
Tornadoes suck air inward and upward. Close to the center of the tornado there is little inward motion. There the wind mostly moves in a circle and upwards.
The wind can blow in any direction.
Yes, wind near a tornado spirals in towards the tornado.
In the direction of the wind, so that wind does not blow in and out of the tepee.
Yes, it is the direction from which the wind tends to blow.
The winds in a tornado spin, so the wind itself can come from any direction. Except for rare cases, tornadoes in the northern hemisphere rotate counterclockwise while those in the southern hemisphere spin clockwise.
* *
Yes. A tornado is essentially a very strong vortex of wind.
The wind blows in all directions.
East To West.
Primarily from the southwest.
The speed and direction of a tornado can be determined using Doppler radar by measuring how far the tornado moves between sweeps and in what direction.
Wind direction is the direction which the wind comes from.