detonating 的 2 个定义
det·o·nat·ed, det·o·nat·ing.
- to explode with suddenness and violence.
det·o·nat·ed, det·o·nat·ing.
- to cause to explode.
detonating 近义词
set off bomb
更多detonating例句
- Any one of them could have—and still may—detonate the deal if the negotiated plan falls apart.
- Another way would be to fly a grenade immediately to where the enemy is positioned, detonating it on contact.
- The leak in Amuay, Venezuela, was slow but kept leaking for more than an hour before the vapor detonated.
- Instead, a man detonated 80 pounds of explosives as part of an elaborate gender-reveal party stunt, the Kingston Police Department told the New Hampshire Union Leader.
- The first H-bomb, detonated by the United States in 1952, was 1,000 times as powerful as the bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
- His target splits with a satisfying rumble, and then the fragments detonate as he strafes them with more bullets.
- Operators on the ground chose to detonate the rocket shortly after launch once it was established that there were problems.
- He was referring to the lone wolves such as ISIS is now urging online to detonate pipe bombs in Times Square.
- Al-Shahzad failed to properly detonate his bomb and was reported to the New York police by a Muslim-American street vendor.
- That a suicide bomber will detonate himself in the middle of Fifth Avenue?
- He then unscrewed the fuze and threw it away before it could detonate the shell.
- They are very difficult to detonate, and if set on fire do not explode like gunpowder.
- The depth-charge had fouled a trailing wire from some of my ‘stage scenery sky’ and been dragged along to detonate close astern.
- I decided to send three balls down each, leave 12 in the cavern, then detonate them all at once.
- In fact guncotton in the colloid state may be hammered on an anvil, and, as a rule, only the portion struck will detonate or fire.