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Discover LudwigThe phrase "atomic fire" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts related to nuclear energy, explosions, or metaphorical expressions involving intense energy or destruction.
Example: "The scientists were concerned about the potential for atomic fire in the event of a reactor meltdown."
Alternatives: "nuclear fire" or "radiation blaze".
Exact(10)
I sit in the back seat with my brother eating penny candy: Pixie Stix, Atomic Fire Balls, root-beer barrels, Lik-m-aid.
Now it's time to try a new way: the way where a hate-filled fifty-thousand-ton reptile burns everything with his atomic fire breath.
All I myself can do is issue a threat: if some upstairs nitwit even contemplates signing the cancellation papers, I will return from the netherworld in a chariot of atomic fire, leap out, and point my bottom at him.
When he was 82, Ferrara credited his energy to candy and said: "I eat an Atomic Fire Ball every day".
And can we forget what happened in August of 1945, when American bombers immolated well over two hundred thousand Japanese civilians with atomic fire?
Today's Times article mentions the "nuclear bomb" comparison, but leaves out the perhaps important part where Lively "prays" that his campaign is like a massive explosion that kills tens of thousands of people in a disintegrating rain of atomic fire.
Similar(50)
Om and Bomb do not rhyme, but they interlinked on a mesa called Los Alamos, and in the desert expanse of God's felt absence, atomic fires were lit, leading some, such as the French philosopher and Jesuit priest Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, to consider the "spiritual repercussions of the atom bomb".
The repeated atomic firing of transitions establishes the discrete behavior of the qualitative Petri net, compare Figure 11.
Step by dreadful step, it shows us an entirely plausible path from today's tense geopolitics to atomic annihilation and beyond, to what comes after nuclear fire.
This was an updated variation on the fear, first voiced before Trinity, that an atomic blast might set the atmosphere on fire.
"Afterheat," Robert Socolow, a Princeton University professor, called it in an essay for the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, "the fire that you can't put out".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com