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fulminate
[ fuhl-muh-neyt ]
verb (used without object)
- to explode with a loud noise; detonate.
- to issue denunciations or the like (usually followed by against ):
The minister fulminated against legalized vice.
verb (used with object)
- to cause to explode.
- to issue or pronounce with vehement denunciation, condemnation, or the like.
noun
- one of a group of unstable, explosive compounds derived from fulminic acid, especially the mercury salt of fulminic acid, which is a powerful detonating agent.
fulminate
/ ˈfʌlmɪˌneɪt; ˈfʊl- /
verb
- introften foll byagainst to make criticisms or denunciations; rail
- to explode with noise and violence
- archaic.intr to thunder and lighten
noun
- any salt or ester of fulminic acid, esp the mercury salt, which is used as a detonator
Derived Forms
- ˈڳܱˌԲٴǰ, noun
- ˌڳܱˈԲپDz, noun
- ˈڳܱˌԲٴǰy, adjective
Other 51Թ Forms
- ڳܱm·Բtǰ noun
- ڳܱ··Բ·ٴ· [fuhl, -m, uh, -n, uh, -tawr-ee, -tohr-ee], adjective
- ԴDz·ڳܱm·ԲiԲ adjective
- ܲ·ڳܱm·Բe adjective
- ܲ·ڳܱm·ԲiԲ adjective
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of fulminate1
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of fulminate1
Example Sentences
The comments came as Trump loyalists have been fulminating against each other online for days over the H-1B visas.
He fulminates hatred — a strong psychological addiction —- so his base won’t notice how he’s enriching his wealthy donors at their expense.
For two years, the state quietly investigated the matter while Villanueva fulminated about it at seemingly every opportunity.
Then, in late January, a local blogger fulminated after finding her signature among 16,000 names on a two-year-old open letter that decried “apartheid” in Israel and the Palestinian territories.
“They are coming, they are coming, they are coming!” he fulminates in a clip the parents’ legal team plays for him during his 2019 deposition, at which he seems unmoved.
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