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129 Sentences With "conflagrations"

How to use conflagrations in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "conflagrations" and check conjugation/comparative form for "conflagrations". Mastering all the usages of "conflagrations" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Instead, many ingredients must combine to create such monstrous conflagrations.
Smaller conflagrations across the country were too many to number.
I can't bear to think about the conflagrations to come.
But how many people remain displaced because of these conflagrations?
It encompasses sprawling vistas, urban conflagrations and tiny, tender dioramas.
The resulting conflagrations, according to the researcher, will be almost unimaginable.
And Australia's conflagrations are but a taste of disasters to come.
The conflicts and controversies themselves were trivial compared to past global conflagrations.
Thus, I'd seen conflagrations reflected in the smudged lenses of Joe's glasses.
And at right angles two different conflagrations were sweeping down upon it.
There has been no nuclear war, nor have there been any major conflagrations.
The medium of timelapse lends already-frightening conflagrations an even more frenzied energy.
The conflagrations in North Kivu, South Kivu and Ituri all involve foreign powers.
These sorts of conflagrations are likely to become the norm, rather than the exception.
There have been vitriolic blog exchanges, expletive-laced social media conflagrations and conference blowups.
Front-page conflagrations compel Kennedy to send troops; terrified segregationists fear a Second Reconstruction.
The conflagrations are obliterating landscapes and their ecosystems, reshaping the continent in irreparable ways.
Videogames are machines masquerading as worlds; conflagrations of code specifically designed to create unreal environments.
He rides with officers, follows them onto the streets and straight into assorted testy conflagrations.
The blaze stands as the deadliest of nearly 100 conflagrations burning from Texas to Oregon.
It's especially alarming given that fire seasons are getting longer and conflagrations are becoming more destructive.
For 15 years — longer than the two global conflagrations combined — Western soldiers have been at war.
Two deaths have been linked to the fire, one of two major conflagrations in the state.
In 1968, in a divided America, five young adults negotiate wars abroad and conflagrations back home.
It was my job to make sure that these political and policy brushfires didn't become conflagrations.
All three countries are now trapped in self-inflaming conflagrations that could easily burn on for decades.
Months of hot, dry weather and strong winds created the perfectly deadly conditions that keep conflagrations roaring.
In less than a month, the Trump administration has already allowed two "brushfires" to grow into legal conflagrations.
Active fire suppression tactics have also prevented smaller fires from burning, allowing fuel to accumulate and drive surging conflagrations.
The agency's investigation covered 12 individual blazes accounting for much of the conflagrations that erupted the night of Oct.
I think of the remnants of conflagrations when I see Fire (America), Teresita Fernández's exhibition at Lehmann Maupin Downtown.
And the growing massive, destructive, and deadly conflagrations we're seeing now are hardly a force of nature at this point.
Each of these conflagrations was preceded by intensifying challenges to, and then surprisingly rapid breakdowns within, the prevailing international order.
In years when California is parched by drought, high-elevation terrain covered by dry timber is susceptible to large conflagrations.
The dust and soot from the impact and the conflagrations prevented all sunlight from reaching the planet's surface for months.
If the region has lately calmed down (partly owing to the efforts of American diplomats), Germany in particular fears fresh conflagrations.
Sources close to Trump tell me he knows these trade conflagrations could make last week's stock market volatility the new normal.
The Losers are flipping through ancient history, looking at woodcut drawings from centuries past, depicting clashes and conflagrations from Derry's history.
But the region has no chance of escaping from these conflagrations without improving its economy and creating jobs for the young.
Active participation in seeking resolutions to complex global conflagrations must not depend upon the moment's economics, trade deficits or electoral politics.
And, critically, they thin the forests and woodlands, depriving large fires of the fuel they relish when growing into towering conflagrations.
The sad truth is that today's media is loyal only to spectacle, and conflagrations attract more eyeballs than in-depth analysis.
On the other side of the family, a great-uncle grew up during the drought and conflagrations of the Dust Bowl.
Grazers like deer and sheep play an important role in wildfire ecology, mowing down plants and reducing the severity of conflagrations.
The tourism industry has not been broadly hit by the wildfires so far because conflagrations have mainly occurred in smaller communities.
But in the video, the snake explodes and becomes a thousand butterflies: Her conflagrations are in the past, and Swift is renewed.
It's an image of unambiguous defeat but also an emblem of resistance and a portent of the ghastly conflagrations still to come.
Over the next week, NASA-led satellites captured daily images of smoke pouring off the tundra from what appear to be multiple conflagrations.
After another year of devastating wildfires, Newsom asked legislators to appropriate $22020 billion over four years to prevent, track and fight new conflagrations.
As the rapid appearance of this bloom demonstrates, life has a habit of prevailing even in the face of nature's most ferocious conflagrations.
In the track titled "Musique Isotype," I'm using chopped up and processed basketball sounds to create fractured rhythms and bouncing conflagrations of sound.
Yiannopoulos's star rose throughout 2016 thanks to a succession of controversial public appearances, social media conflagrations, Breitbart radio spots, television hits, and magazine profiles.
Hundreds of people remain unaccounted for and 58 people have died in the conflagrations, which have also caused billions of dollars in property damage.
For the most part, though, Hennessey and Wittes characterize earlier presidential overreach as "small potatoes" compared to the conflagrations of the last three years.
Given what Northern California has endured recently with wildfires, perhaps it's high time to honor those risking life and limb to contain such conflagrations.
These pyrocumulonimbus clouds frequently produce lightning, and as they sweep across the landscape their bolts of electricity can ignite new conflagrations, Yale E360 reports.
They can combine their data with other georeferenced data, such as Twitter feeds, to produce images of disasters, demonstrations, conflagrations and celebrations as they happen.
But that same cold front had also delivered high winds through Saturday night, creating fresh emergencies as it pushed the conflagrations northward into new terrain.
This one, both the apotheotic arson and the innumerable smaller public conflagrations, would have been inescapable in our current media age, and three times as loud.
Because of climate change, many of us now endure hotter weather, live with increased risk of fire and breathe smoky air blown in from distant conflagrations.
You don't want to get mired in a war that could spill over to Saudi Arabia and Israel, sparking conflagrations from Afghanistan to Lebanon and beyond.
At times, as his simmering fury bursts open in meetings or on Twitter, and as new political conflagrations take hold, it looks like Trump's presidency is unraveling.
In August, as fears over fires in the Amazon grew, people began checking NASA's satellite maps and noticed that there were even more conflagrations in central Africa.
The conflagrations can grow so massive and intense that they create their own weather: As hot air rises, additional air rushes in at ground level to replace it.
In Southern California, the season extends into the fall, when Santa Ana winds, which blow from the dry interior toward the coast, whip up small fires into major conflagrations.
Although their reasons vary, the constant conflagrations, ones that pit old-fashioned defense hawks who approve of some increased spending against the growing class of deficit hawks, have loomed.
Picking from among the various conflagrations, mistakes, and Softbank-led boondoggles deals, we dove into Blue Apron's earnings report, which led to a steep decline in its market value.
It was small compared with today's conflagrations — 44 houses burned down — but it prompted the county to set up a program to harden its roughly 8,000 houses against fire.
Scientists say the fingerprints of climate change are all over the raging conflagrations, so big they are kicking up fire tornadoes and dry lightning that can start new fires.
Climate change, urban sprawl into naturally burning ecosystems and an overly successful historical approach to limiting wildland fires have all contributed to bigger and more damaging conflagrations in recent decades.
The Mendocino Complex Fire, made up of two separate conflagrations that merged, grew to 266,047.5 acres (223,245 hectares) and was still growing, California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said.
Those political uprisings, like the larger conflagrations that spread throughout America during the long, hot summers from 1963 to 1969, represent a direct confrontation of institutional racism and economic injustice.
Then as now, across the South, efforts to engage honestly with history, to restore public spaces so they are welcoming to all, were sparks for conflagrations of violence and hatred.
The Mendocino Complex Fire, made up of two separate conflagrations that merged, has burned 283,800 acres (114,800 hectares) and was still growing, California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said.
Others sense little appetite among lawmakers for another year of battles over divisive social issues, noting that few of the faces in the legislatures have changed since the previous conflagrations.
The unpredictable conflagrations burn 400 percent more land today than they did back in 1972, and 15 of the 20 most destructive fires have occurred in the past two decades.
Here Sternberg's idiomatic language disrupts an easy interpretation: is this objectified woman a muse of warfare, or a figure of feminine tranquility as a contrast to the unfolding conflagrations around her?
Let's hope that either the hypothesis is proved wrong, or that we find a new way, transcending traditional nation-states, to distribute political power … before all those eruptions turn into conflagrations.
Large wildfires are not unusual in Siberia's boreal forests, but in the past few years, this sparsely-populated region has seen some of the most intense summertime conflagrations in its history.
Hot temperatures, erratic and gusty winds, and tinder-dry vegetation are the same conditions that caused wildfires in Northern California to explode into deadly conflagrations in the space of two weeks.
Strong winds and high temperatures are predicted for this weekend, leading fire officials to warn that the blazes already burning will spread, while new conflagrations will produce more demands for help.
Viewers of the 1977 World Series saw the conflagrations on TV. "Decade of Fire" is at its best when showing how the fires affected individuals effectively left to fend for themselves.
Soon, city-razing conflagrations, like those of San Francisco in 1906 and Chicago in 1871, were a thing of the past—at least until climate change began supercharging wildfires in California.
The 105-minute "Vespro Della Beata Vergine" ("Vespers of the Blessed Virgin"), to give its full title, was long a musicological minefield, rife with conflagrations over its origin, nature and purpose.
Still, Trump often has a tendency to trample over the carefully choreographed imagery that surrounds presidential travel, by igniting political conflagrations often set off by his erratic reactions to events back home.
A blistering heat wave that has baked much of California in abnormally high temperatures ranging from the upper 90s to the triple digits has been a major factor contributing to the conflagrations.
A world with no policeman—even an imperfect, grudging and inconsistent one—could leave no firewalls in place to keep local crises and conflicts from spreading into regional and even global conflagrations.
The reason is that smoke from nuclear conflagrations would rise as high as 0003 miles into the atmosphere, where it would be protected from rain and take at least 10 years to dissipate.
They have been replaced by a more varied and technologically sophisticated fleet of around 20 vessels that can, the Fire Department believes, swiftly respond to conflagrations, chemical spills, and biological and nuclear attacks.
But like real forest fires and even metaphorical ones like the 2008 financial crisis, these conflagrations have a real purpose: to burn away the deadwood and replenish the soil with nutrients for future growth.
As smoke from these and other conflagrations drifted across the Pacific Northwest, the air quality in Seattle declined to a level considered "unhealthy for all," and the city's mayor urged residents to stay indoors.
To anticipate blind spots before they ignite full-blown social media conflagrations, some publishers and authors are soliciting feedback in advance from readers who share a cultural background or other traits with the characters.
A hotter world means drier vegetation and bigger fires, and this season's fires are behaving in astonishing ways: Instead of a mild bushfire burning here and there, now the conflagrations are leveling entire ecosystems.
Trey Mourning's game is less bullish than his father's, reflecting the sport's dramatic shift since those Heat-Knicks conflagrations, which often ended with neither team within squinting view of 90 points, much less 100.
In Ventura/Santa Barbara (Thomas fire), Los Angeles ( Skirball, Rye and Creek fires), and San Diego (Lilac fire), Santa Ana winds have been blamed for literally fanning the flames of smaller fires into conflagrations.
Southern California firefighters are taking advantage of calm conditions to attack a small but destructive wildfire in the Santa Barbara County community of Goleta, one of many conflagrations burning in the hot and dry West.
For millennia, the native peoples of both places maintained a healthy relationship with fire, understanding the value in starting conflagrations so as to reset ecosystems, as wildfires have done since they first burned on Earth.
And near the end of the book there is what appears to be a substantial flash-forward to Jacob's life, revealing the fate of his marriage and the aftermath of the conflagrations in the Middle East.
Wildfires have always been a part of living in the hotter, dryer parts of California, but the fires have been worse in the past year, with major conflagrations breaking out in the Napa Valley and Anaheim.
President Trump recently blamed environmental protections for the loss of homes and lives in wildfires in California, and followed up that groundless suggestion by strongly implying that increased logging could protect rural towns from these conflagrations.
And while scientists have said that the climate context of the wildfires is a key — though not sole — factor in allowing the fires to grow into such large conflagrations, the Trump administration is not emphasizing these findings.
Since then, thanks to more than a hundred and fifty lightning ignitions, almost every acre, excepting bare rock and the creek itself, has burned at least once—some in small, pocket blazes, some in larger, more intense conflagrations.
But as the "Paris" section of the show reveals, this poet of the ravages of time produced some unforgettable images of contemporary buildings gutted by conflagrations and of the transformations of the city wrought by the Revolution and modernization.
We hope the day will come when, instead of allowing their leadership to spread conflagrations that produce nothing but death, destruction and misery, Palestinians in Gaza can join Palestinians in the West Bank to help fight fires together with Israelis.
He suggests the growing difference between right and left can be explained early on by huge conflagrations like Clinton's scandals and Buchanan's culture war, but also by short-term political dust-ups like Zoë Baird's ill-fated 1993 attorney general nomination.
"If we are to prevent bush fires and save lives, property and wildlife, we will also need to find solutions for the other more complex human dimensions of the causes of conflagrations like the ones we are now witnessing," he writes.
University administrators decided they'd had enough of the random conflagrations and helped start the university's official Rally Committee, a group of men they charged with becoming the "guardians of all campus traditions," as one history of the group put it.
Its fire-resistant bark means it survives when other trees succumb to natural or man-made conflagrations, making it a pioneer in the recovery of fire-scoured landscapes; below ground, its deep nitrogen-fixing roots suck nutrients up into the soil.
Both teams were wearing black armbands in memory of those who have lost their lives in the conflagrations and lined up before the match to unite with the crowd in a minute of applause for the emergency services fighting the fires.
Still, there remains a sort of wondrous spectacle in "Battlefield," in its actors' use of cloaks and shawls (by Oria Puppo) to transform themselves into gods and animals; in the lushly saturated lighting of Phillippe Vialatte that conjures dawns and sunsets and conflagrations.
The Mendocino Complex Fire, made up of two separate conflagrations that merged near Ukiah, north of Sacramento, exploded by 25 percent overnight and had blackened nearly 400 square miles as of Sunday morning, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said.
Weiss came of age as the Cold War escalated: the Bay of Pigs, construction of the Berlin Wall, strategic weapons in Cuba, conflagrations in Africa, coups and political assassinations in South America, China going nuclear, a conflict in Vietnam intensifying every day.
Again and again, they were blindsided by the conflagrations that upended their societies and wrecked their orderly lives — much as people today would be dumbfounded by an armageddon exploding from the Korean Peninsula, the Taiwan Straits, the Persian Gulf or the Baltics.
CalFire, one of the agencies charged with putting those fires out, is tracking upward of two dozen conflagrations up and down the state at the moment—Detwiller, Grade, Bridge, Wall, Alamo, Garza, on and on—ranging in size from a couple hundred acres to nearly 50,000.
In a call from his Capitol office on Veterans Day, Mr. McCarthy, who represents California's Central Valley, laid out for Mr. Trump the severity of the conflagrations that have ravaged his state and the destruction they were causing, according to a person familiar with the conversation.
There were no immediate reports of any deaths or injuries, but the intensity of the fires and the extreme weather conditions earlier in the year have prompted anguished debate among some Swedes who have described the conflagrations in apocalyptic terms and linked them to global warming.
Along the way, he witnessed a scene of apocalypse: corpses strewn like rocks, a baby crying in the arms of its charred mother, scalded men peppered with shards of glass, their clothes melted, wandering like ghosts through the wasteland, the unbreathable darkened air, the raging conflagrations.
The unrest, which started on the night of July 12, 1967, and ended on July 17, came during a period when racial tensions were exploding into violent conflagrations across the country: the Watts neighborhood in Los Angeles, Harlem, Detroit and nearby New Jersey communities, including Plainfield.
Then there is the goading of that word "Facts," in the show's title, which, in US public discourse depending on the context, instead of settling arguments, merely fans them into blazing conflagrations despite the stakes being not nearly as high as they are in Israel and Palestine.
California continues to take stock of its unprecedented conflagrations—between the Camp Fire in the north, which on its own is the deadliest and most destructive fire in California history, and the Woolsey Fire in the south, 91 lives have been lost so far, with hundreds more still missing.
Though the city's crime rate has been trending downward amid a comeback of sorts in recent years, some interviewees cited the simmering specter of "Devil's Night," the evening of October 30, when arsonists have a history of setting conflagrations across the city, in some cases apparently for insurance money.
Perhaps the more important point is that whirling pillars of flame are not only common (some experts claim that a 'nado or whirl will develop in every wildfire, even if people don't always spot it), they are also known to spread fire faster and less predictably than other conflagrations.
Miranda was referring to another recent Oscar controversy, the decision to soldier on with no host for the show after Kevin Hart stepped down over offensive tweets, but the truth is that Oscar conflagrations are happening on a regular basis these days, and many are of the academy's own making.
Dry conditions in Florida and Georgia have spurred conflagrations that are ongoing: More than 750 fire fighters are battling the 152,000-acre West Mims fire in the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge near Fargo, Ga. Another fire has burned 8,800 acres in the Merrit Island National Wildlife Refuge near Avon Park, Fla.
" Little Dog imagines the monarchs fleeing "not winter but the napalm clouds of your childhood in Vietnam," travelling for thousands of miles until "you can no longer fathom the explosion they came from, only a family of butterflies floating in clean, cool air, their wings finally, after so many conflagrations, fireproof.
While this fire season is no doubt bad — more than 80 big burns now burning from Montana to Southern California, while the August conflagrations that swept British Columbia were the province's worst fires on record — we're still unlikely to surpass the record fires of 2015, when more than 10 million acres burned.
He abhorred what he considered crass provincialism among Irish working-class audiences, the very people who took to the streets in the April 473 Easter Uprising and fought in the ensuing Irish Civil War — two bloody conflagrations that stirred as much ambivalence in Yeats as did the narrow aesthetics of Irish theater.
Friday's conflagrations came six years after Columbia Gas accepted blame for a gas explosion in Springfield, Massachusetts, that injured 17 people and caused an estimated $1.3 million in property damage That occurred when a Columbia Gas technician called to investigate a gas odor at a nightclub accidentally punctured a line, the state Department of Public Utilities said in a report.
Friday's conflagrations came six years after Columbia Gas accepted blame for a gas explosion in Springfield, Massachusetts, that injured 17 people and caused an estimated $1.3 million in property damage That occurred when a Columbia Gas technician called to investigate a gas odor at a nightclub accidentally punctured a line, the state Department of Public Utilities said in a report.

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