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The word 'pulverized' is a correct and commonly used word in written English.
It means to reduce something to fine particles or powder. You can use 'pulverized' when describing the process of grinding or crushing something into a fine powder, such as spices in cooking, or when describing a building or structure that has been completely demolished. Example: The old factory was pulverized by the wrecking ball, leaving nothing but a pile of rubble.
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Limestone, when pulverized, forms silt-sized dusts.
The solid is first pulverized and mixed with water to form a paste.
After hydriding, the niobium is crushed and pulverized to fine powder, which is then reheated and dehydrided in a vacuum to produce niobium powder.
This process uses pulverized coal (usually less than 74 micrometres) blown into the gasifier by a mixture of steam and oxygen.
The explosion of millions more shells in the new offensive, accompanied by torrential rain, would quickly turn the battlefield into an apocalyptic expanse: a swampy, pulverized mire, dotted with water-filled craters deep enough to drown a man, all made worse by the churned-up graves of soldiers killed in earlier fighting.
Suspended pulverized stone, or rock flour, makes glacial meltwater opaque.
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You can pulverize them yourself in a food processor or in a mortar and pestle.
Perfect and pulverizing.
The explosion hurled her through the air, nearly severing her right leg and pulverizing most of the left.
As the drum rotates, the steel balls pulverize the contents; this device is called a ball mill.
Shredding or pulverizing reduces the size of the waste articles, resulting in a uniform mass of material.
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