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Fulminate   Listen
verb
Fulminate  v. i.  (past & past part. fulminated; pres. part. fulminating)  
1.
To thunder; hence, to make a loud, sudden noise; to detonate; to explode with a violent report.
2.
To issue or send forth decrees or censures with the assumption of supreme authority; to thunder forth menaces.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Fulminate" Quotes from Famous Books



... marvels, more sublimities for unhesitating acceptance. He was always in sympathy both with the Roman and the early Greek Churches, and sometimes in his own ritual he borrowed from both; yet he could fulminate hotly enough at times against the excesses of either. He loved deeply and hated strongly; but the love was permanent and real, the hatred transient ...
— The Cornwall Coast • Arthur L. Salmon

... burns more or less violently when ignited by a flame, it is still a somewhat unstable product, and now and then explodes with appalling results on apparently quite insufficient provocation. In use it is fired with a detonator, a big copper cap charged with a fulminate of the highest power, and when lighted in this fashion the energies unloosed by the explosion, though limited in their area, are stupendous. The detonator is almost as dangerous, for a few grains of the fulminate contained in it are sufficient ...
— The Gold Trail • Harold Bindloss

... moment deceived by this fellow's common lies. This"—he paused dramatically and held his brother officers with a burning glance—"this instrument, in my opinion, was devised for the purpose of injecting fulminate ...
— Rainbow's End • Rex Beach

... fearless of all consequences; and as the ancient war-chariot would sometimes set its axle on fire by the rapidity of its own movement, so would the ardent soul of Otis become ignited and fulminate with thought, as he ...
— James Otis The Pre-Revolutionist • John Clark Ridpath

... The niter was obtained from lixiviation of nitrous earth found under old houses, barns, etc. The supervision of the production of iron, lead, copper, and all the minerals which needed development, as well as the manufacture of sulphuric and nitric acids (the latter required for the supply of the fulminate of mercury for percussion-caps), without which the firearms of our day would have been useless, was added to the niter bureau. Such was the progress that, in a short time, the bureau was aiding or managing some twenty to thirty furnaces with an annual yield ...
— The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government • Jefferson Davis

... Waterloo was not Napoleon, put to rout; not Wellington, giving way at four o'clock, desperate at five; not Bluecher, who did not fight. The man who won the battle of Waterloo was Cambronne. To fulminate at the thunderbolt ...
— Seeing Europe with Famous Authors, Volume 4 (of 10) • Various



Words linked to "Fulminate" :   fulminant, blow up, come along, fulminating mercury, fulmination, mercury fulminate, rail, explode, appear, fulminate of mercury, detonate, denounce, set off, salt



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