|
EXPLOSIVE |
Combustible |
|
INCENDIARY |
Combustible |
|
INFLAMMABLE |
Combustible |
|
BURNABLE |
Combustible. |
|
|
PEAT |
Combustible material |
|
FUEL |
Combustible matter |
|
COMBUSTIBILITY |
The quality of being combustible. |
|
EMPYRICAL |
Containing the combustible principle of coal. |
|
|
ACCENDIBLE |
Capable of being inflamed or kindled; combustible;
inflammable. |
|
PRODUCER |
A furnace for producing combustible gas which is used for
fuel. |
|
CINDER |
Partly burned or vitrified coal, or other combustible, in
which fire is extinct. |
|
FUZE |
A tube, filled with combustible matter, for exploding a
shell, etc. See Fuse, n. |
|
BAVIN |
A fagot of brushwood, or other light combustible matter, for
kindling fires; refuse of brushwood. |
|
COAL |
A thoroughly charred, and extinguished or still ignited,
fragment from wood or other combustible substance; charcoal. |
|
ASHES |
The earthy or mineral particles of combustible
substances remaining after combustion, as of wood or coal. |
|
LANCE |
One of the small paper cases filled with combustible
composition, which mark the outlines of a figure. |
|
PYRE |
A funeral pile; a combustible heap on which the dead are
burned; hence, any pile to be burnt. |
|
PRIMING |
The powder or other combustible used to communicate fire
to a charge of gunpowder, as in a firearm. |
|
COMBUSTION |
The combination of a combustible with a supporter of
combustion, producing heat, and sometimes both light and heat. |
|
OCTYLENE |
Any one of a series of metameric hydrocarbons (C8H16) of
the ethylene series. In general they are combustible, colorless
liquids. |
|
ORTHOXYLENE |
That variety of xylene in which the two methyl groups
are in the ortho position; a colorless, liquid, combustible hydrocarbon
resembling benzene. |
|
STAR |
A composition of combustible matter used in the heading of
rockets, in mines, etc., which, exploding in the air, presents a
starlike appearance. |
|
DOWNCOME |
A pipe for leading combustible gases downward from the
top of the blast furnace to the hot-blast stoves, boilers, etc., where
they are burned. |
|
INCOMBUSTIBLE |
Not combustible; not capable of being burned,
decomposed, or consumed by fire; uninflammable; as, asbestus is an
incombustible substance; carbon dioxide is an incombustible gas. |
|
TORCH |
A light or luminary formed of some combustible substance, as
of resinous wood; a large candle or flambeau, or a lamp giving a large,
flaring flame. |