No country does. A suction vortex is not a tornado; it is a feature that can develop in a tornado. A tornado itself is a vortex but can sometimes contain smaller vortices (vortexes) called suction vortices. Such a storm is called a multiple-vortex tornado.
Texas
Texas
=It originated in America.=
No. Tornadoes cover small areas, and if a tornado is coming there usually isn't time to evacuate.
A very small country perhaps. In rare cases a tornado may travel over 100 miles, which is enough to cross some countries.
Tornado country,a bit bumby terrain.
The Great Plains.
The deadliest tornado in the U.S. in 2011 was the Joplin, Missouri tornado of May 22. The death toll from this tornado stands at 157 marking it as the 7th deadliest tornado in U.S. history and the deadliest in the country since 1947.
The word "tornado" is believed to have originated from the Spanish word "tornar," meaning "to turn" or "to twist." This was then adapted into "tornada" and eventually evolved into "tornado" in English.
No part of any country is a tornado. A tornado is a weather event, not a place. However all parts of the US can get tornadoes except, perhaps, for northern Alaska.
No. A tornado is a localized event, usually not affecting more than a town or two. A tornado may lead to people leaving a town, or sometimes a tornado-prone region, but not usually a country. For example, many people left the small town of Greensburg, Kansas after most of it was destroyed by a tornado in 2007, but they all stayed in the United States.