网站首页  词典首页

请输入您要查询的词汇:

 

词汇 napalm
释义

Definition of napalm in English:

napalm

noun ˈneɪpɑːmˈneɪˌpɑ(l)m
mass noun
  • A highly flammable sticky jelly used in incendiary bombs and flame-throwers, consisting of petrol thickened with special soaps.

    凝固汽油

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Meanwhile, the prime stocks of precision munitions have been drawn down, and speculation about the future use of cluster bombs and napalm and other vile weapons is being heard.
    • The US has already admitted that it used napalm during the siege.
    • Napalm was used widely against civilians, and most major cities were obliterated.
    • I remember me and my mates nearly burning my shed down making napalm from petrol and soap when I was about 13 or 14.
    • These were upsetting photos of effects of people burned by napalm and vegetation devastated by Agent Orange.
    • It has been alleged in the course of the raids that chemical weapons and napalm bombs were also used.
    • The French military calmly withdrew long enough to launch an air strike that dropped napalm on the exposed Italian troops.
    • Coalition forces have not used napalm - either during operations there, or at any other time.
    • They are using depleted uranium weapons, and may be using napalm.
    • A major problem with a weapon like napalm, dropped from a great height on those who are thought to be soldiers, is that there is great risk of also killing or maiming civilians.
    • The white supremacist, who amassed a terrifying stockpile of arms and explosives including home-made napalm and shotguns, has been jailed for 11 years.
    • He concluded that compared to weapons like napalm, ‘these temporarily disabling gases seem more humane than horrible’.
    • We expended almost two million tons of bombs, rockets, napalm, and so forth against the trail and lost far too many men.
    • There are at least two separate reports that the Americans are dropping napalm.
    • If they got any human readings, they would call in the attack bombers, which would drop napalm, for total destruction.
    • I watched the pilot of the Corsair in front of me drop his napalm bombs.
    • Hand grenades produce nearly as much flame as a flamethrower, and artillery rounds look like a full blown napalm strike when they go off.
    • For sixty-two years, the Navy pummeled the island with millions of pounds of bombs, missiles, depleted-uranium bullets, napalm and Agent Orange.
    • Napalm was dropped indiscriminately, and the US seriously debated dropping nuclear weapons on the North.
verb ˈneɪpɑːmˈneɪˌpɑ(l)m
[with object]
  • Attack with bombs containing napalm.

    用凝固汽油弹攻击

    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘We napalmed both those bridge approaches,’ said the Colonel in a recent interview.
    • It would go and burn off tracts of native bush - napalm them, actually - so that it could plant pine trees in the name of regional development.
    • The general in charge of the napalming, acknowledged that had the United States lost the war he would most probably have been tried as a war criminal.
    • In the foreground, I copied this photo of a girl who'd been napalmed in the Vietnam war.
    • They refused to sign a 1980 UN treaty banning the napalming of civilian targets and are one of the few countries still using such concoctions.
    • The village was burning because it had been napalmed.
    • We flattened North Korea's dams, factories, and cities, and napalmed its forests.
    • It was brandished by the anti-war movement to point up the discrepancy between our purported war aims and the grisly realities of napalmed villages and dead Vietnamese civilians.
    • The police found that the remains found at the 97th Penthouse were napalmed to death.
    • In fact, there are a few, such as the napalming of the crestline at the end of the first mission that will take your breath away.
    • I heard the marine colonel say: ‘We napalmed those bridges.’
    • ‘Our Government should napalm whoever was responsible for this,’ said an outraged tourist, who lives six miles from the stricken site.
    • First let's remember that nobody is perfect and America itself napalmed civilian villages in Vietnam.
    • There's an image from Vietnam by the photographer Ian Davis of a Vietnamese girl running naked after being napalmed.
    • The defenders had been bombed and napalmed by airplanes, shellacked by artillery and doused with poison gas, and they had no ammunition of their own left to fight back.
    • Targets, including towns and villages, are indiscriminately bombed and napalmed.
    • A friend said ‘Should've napalmed the lot of 'em.’
    • If we were to take this line of reasoning to its logical extreme, the tragedy at My Lai would have been regarded differently in history had a pair of F - 4 fighter-bombers napalmed the village.
    • I think a genuine concern is raised by people concerning the graphic image of that young girl in Viet Nam who had been napalmed and who was nude, as to whether she would be covered.
    • Are we going to start napalming the country for him or something?

Origin

1940s: from na(phthenic) and palm(itic acid).

Definition of napalm in US English:

napalm

nounˈnāˌpä(l)mˈneɪˌpɑ(l)m
  • A highly flammable sticky jelly used in incendiary bombs and flamethrowers, consisting of gasoline thickened with special soaps.

    凝固汽油

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A major problem with a weapon like napalm, dropped from a great height on those who are thought to be soldiers, is that there is great risk of also killing or maiming civilians.
    • I remember me and my mates nearly burning my shed down making napalm from petrol and soap when I was about 13 or 14.
    • Hand grenades produce nearly as much flame as a flamethrower, and artillery rounds look like a full blown napalm strike when they go off.
    • These were upsetting photos of effects of people burned by napalm and vegetation devastated by Agent Orange.
    • If they got any human readings, they would call in the attack bombers, which would drop napalm, for total destruction.
    • It has been alleged in the course of the raids that chemical weapons and napalm bombs were also used.
    • He concluded that compared to weapons like napalm, ‘these temporarily disabling gases seem more humane than horrible’.
    • Napalm was used widely against civilians, and most major cities were obliterated.
    • The white supremacist, who amassed a terrifying stockpile of arms and explosives including home-made napalm and shotguns, has been jailed for 11 years.
    • I watched the pilot of the Corsair in front of me drop his napalm bombs.
    • For sixty-two years, the Navy pummeled the island with millions of pounds of bombs, missiles, depleted-uranium bullets, napalm and Agent Orange.
    • Coalition forces have not used napalm - either during operations there, or at any other time.
    • We expended almost two million tons of bombs, rockets, napalm, and so forth against the trail and lost far too many men.
    • The French military calmly withdrew long enough to launch an air strike that dropped napalm on the exposed Italian troops.
    • The US has already admitted that it used napalm during the siege.
    • There are at least two separate reports that the Americans are dropping napalm.
    • They are using depleted uranium weapons, and may be using napalm.
    • Napalm was dropped indiscriminately, and the US seriously debated dropping nuclear weapons on the North.
    • Meanwhile, the prime stocks of precision munitions have been drawn down, and speculation about the future use of cluster bombs and napalm and other vile weapons is being heard.
verbˈnāˌpä(l)mˈneɪˌpɑ(l)m
[with object]
  • Attack with bombs containing napalm.

    用凝固汽油弹攻击

    Example sentencesExamples
    • First let's remember that nobody is perfect and America itself napalmed civilian villages in Vietnam.
    • They refused to sign a 1980 UN treaty banning the napalming of civilian targets and are one of the few countries still using such concoctions.
    • I heard the marine colonel say: ‘We napalmed those bridges.’
    • The defenders had been bombed and napalmed by airplanes, shellacked by artillery and doused with poison gas, and they had no ammunition of their own left to fight back.
    • In the foreground, I copied this photo of a girl who'd been napalmed in the Vietnam war.
    • If we were to take this line of reasoning to its logical extreme, the tragedy at My Lai would have been regarded differently in history had a pair of F - 4 fighter-bombers napalmed the village.
    • We flattened North Korea's dams, factories, and cities, and napalmed its forests.
    • There's an image from Vietnam by the photographer Ian Davis of a Vietnamese girl running naked after being napalmed.
    • The police found that the remains found at the 97th Penthouse were napalmed to death.
    • A friend said ‘Should've napalmed the lot of 'em.’
    • It was brandished by the anti-war movement to point up the discrepancy between our purported war aims and the grisly realities of napalmed villages and dead Vietnamese civilians.
    • Are we going to start napalming the country for him or something?
    • I think a genuine concern is raised by people concerning the graphic image of that young girl in Viet Nam who had been napalmed and who was nude, as to whether she would be covered.
    • It would go and burn off tracts of native bush - napalm them, actually - so that it could plant pine trees in the name of regional development.
    • ‘Our Government should napalm whoever was responsible for this,’ said an outraged tourist, who lives six miles from the stricken site.
    • ‘We napalmed both those bridge approaches,’ said the Colonel in a recent interview.
    • In fact, there are a few, such as the napalming of the crestline at the end of the first mission that will take your breath away.
    • The village was burning because it had been napalmed.
    • The general in charge of the napalming, acknowledged that had the United States lost the war he would most probably have been tried as a war criminal.
    • Targets, including towns and villages, are indiscriminately bombed and napalmed.

Origin

1940s: from na(phthenic) and palm(itic acid).

随便看

 

春雷网英语在线翻译词典收录了464360条英语词汇在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用英语词汇的中英文双语翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2000-2024 Sndmkt.com All Rights Reserved 更新时间:2024/12/27 19:39:07