All of these are bad, but a tsunami is not weather.
Bad weather conditions can include heavy rain, strong winds, thunderstorms, hail, tornadoes, hurricanes, blizzards, and fog. These conditions can pose risks to people's safety, affect transportation and infrastructure, and impact various activities and events.
Rapidly falling air pressure on a barometer usually indicates an approaching low-pressure system or storm, suggesting that stormy weather, such as rain, strong winds, or even thunderstorms, may be on the way.
Yes. Inside the eye of a hurricane it is beatifull weather, because of the low pressure. It can be very cold. It is silent for a moment, you can not float on the water without a proper inflatable tube, but it is very temporary nice weather, but if the eye passes by it will be bad weather again, with the very strong wind (100 - 290 km/u) in the opposite direction (because the hurricane is in fact a great cloud which looks like a wheel with an open spot (the eye) in the middle when you see the computer drawn cloud in the weather forecast.)
This is what most people would say if they read this question: The difference is that they are both the same so there is no difference because the bad weather and bad weather are both the same things anyways. but that is totally wrong because a bad weather and bad weather are not the same a bad weather is one but bad weather can be more than one . And also a bad weather has a in front of it and bad weather doesn't So from my discrimination it could be 60% right. Call em hot and sexy babes .my name is Annalisa
An EF2 tornado is considered to be a significant tornado with wind speeds between 111-135 mph. It can cause considerable damage to buildings and vegetation, overturn vehicles, and pose a threat to human life. Preparedness and quick response are crucial in minimizing the impact of an EF2 tornado.
Very bad if a hurricane or tornado.
a hurricane
A blizzard, tornado, heavy snow during winter, a hurricane, and possibly a tsunami. A flood could also destroy many homes and heavy rain can cause inconvenience to some people living in low- land areas.
Hurricane season: May 15th - November 30th.
Storm chasers and weather experts help to track where a tornado is and where it is going. This information is used to determine who might be in a tornado's path and tell them how to get to safety. If you are driving and a bad thunderstorm moves in you might want to tune into your radio to see if there are alerts for tornadoes or other dangerous weather.
How bad a tsunami or tornado is varies between individual events, but tsunamis are generally worse. While the worst damage of a tornado is usually limited to a small area, a tsunami can easily decimate hundreds of miles of coastline. The worst winds of a tornado usually only affect a given spot for a few seconds. Footage of the 2011 tsunami in Japan show that, in some places, water surged inland for as long as 15 minutes and took even longer to recede. Additionally, water is much denser than air and so can carry much more force. In a tornado you will probably escape harm if you have a few walls to shield you from the wind and debris. In a tsunami, even if you are not injured by the force of the water and debris, you can still drown.
the Noreaster A wicked bad snowstorm Very, very, very rare the we have earthquake, tornado, hurricane, etc
well 2 me tsunami is very bad
A Tsunami Or a hurricane can be deadley but micobursts are bad because of the lack of warning. they have winds as strong or even stronger than a hurricane anc can happen anywhere while hurricanes are limited to costal areas
they did react
Weather is bad becase when the Sky is gray it looks like thirs a storm or The wind is chatching up To be a Tornado and when it's over it looks like Broke Everything and in a Year it will be Repird
Very infrequently, though it would help to have specific definition of "bad weather". A tornado can't occur during a blizzard or a simple rain shower. Tornadoes require strong thunderstorms to form and even then the storm needs to have some sort of rotation to start the tornado. It is not uncommon to see a few tornadoes in the outer storm bands of a hurricane. In the United States it is estimated that about 1% of all thunderstorms produce tornadoes, though the frequency varies by region; thunderstorms in the Midwest are more likely to produce tornadoes than those in the Northeast.