The English word tornado is taken from the Spanish word tronada, that means to turn. Tornadoes are also referred to as twisters in English.
Tornadoes are formally called tornadoes.
Yes. The proper plural spelling of tornado is "tornadoes."
No, gustnadoes are not tornadoes. Gustnadoes are short-lived, spinning wind events that form along the gust front of a thunderstorm. They are not connected to the cloud base like tornadoes and generally have weaker wind speeds.
The word tornado is the singular noun. The plural noun would be tornadoes.
there no base word its just one word Poem is this a base word
there no base word its just one word Poem is this a base word
No, "frowns" is not a base word. The base word is "frown."
The base word in the word reporter is report
there is no base word
The low hanging cloud base that spawns tornadoes is called a wall cloud. Wall clouds are often associated with severe thunderstorms and can be a precursor to tornado formation.
A common synonym for a tornado is "twister".
Tornadogenesis is the process by which tornadoes form.