Exact(1)
Readers of Bob Mould's autobiography, See a Little Light, could have been forgiven for thinking the former Hüsker Dü frontman had not so much burned his bridges with his old bandmates as dynamited them, then dug an even deeper channel in the river to ensure there was no chance of them ever being on the same side of the water ever again.
Similar(59)
But this resistance has not extended to obvious defensive measures such as dynamiting bridges.
It's as facetious and flimsy a position on which to build an argument as suggesting that if a single brick in the Great Pyramid of Giza cracks, the entire thing might as well be dynamited.
If British interests were attacked by a Jewish "terrorist", the home of that terrorist would be dynamited, as a matter of policy.
The explosions were, presumably, the noise of the flood walls giving way, but they led to rumors, which persist to this day, that the levees had been deliberately dynamited, as they were in Caernarvon in 1927.
Thousands gathered downtown as dynamite leveled the 12-story Mapes Hotel.
Sure thing explosive: "a substance (such as dynamite) that is used to cause an explosion".
Robert Chambliss, known locally as "Dynamite Bob," was convicted in 1977 and died in prison in 1985.
It was not until 1977 that Mr. Chambliss, known as Dynamite Bob, was convicted of murder for placing dynamite at the church.
This was the late 1940s, and "bombings were such a constant response that soon our neighborhood became known as Dynamite Hill".
Although Dr. Felson described hip replacement as "dynamite" — highly effective in relieving pain and restoring function — knee replacement may be far less helpful.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com