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"fulminating" Synonyms
raging criticising(UK) criticizing(US) denouncing thundering censuring ranting protesting railing cursing declaiming execrating fuming berating blasting castigating condemning decrying excoriating flaming exploding flashing cracking detonating rumbling blowing up going off blowing erupting banging mushrooming booming shooting off going boom going bang discharging combusting igniting triggering inveighing attacking kicking vociferating vituperating upbraiding challenging snarling scowling sneering snapping growling grumbling muttering hurling roaring barking flinging blustering complaining murmuring abusing threatening mumbling quarrelling(UK) quarreling(US) chattering raving pontificating spieling spouting sermonising(UK) sermonizing(US) orating haranguing expatiating huffing rambling sounding off mouthing off spouting off going on holding forth moaning whining grousing whingeing carping griping beefing grouching bellyaching bleating fussing grizzling nagging wailing screaming objecting remonstrating demurring disagreeing dissenting expostulating disapproving opposing disputing excepting resisting revolting smouldering(UK) smoldering(US) boiling bristling burning festering glowing glowering seething simmering bubbling churning consuming fermenting smoking steaming stirring shouting yelling bellowing bawling hollering crying howling calling baying screeching hallooing holloing clamouring(UK) clamoring(US) yowling blaring clamorous deafening earsplitting loud piercing resounding ringing sonorous stentorian thunderous clangorous plangent slam-bang reverberating big explosive combustible incendiary inflammable detonative flammable volatile eruptive fulminant unstable ignitable burnable combustive ignitible vaporous fiery kindling labile More

113 Sentences With "fulminating"

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

Mr Trump's fulminating against CNN was part of a pattern.
The President was still fulminating about the deal by Thursday afternoon.
There will be endless Russian fulminating about violations of international law.
Next, the museum records Nixon fulminating against perceived tormentors in the press.
News of Facebook's policy change led to much fulminating over the past week.
And his record of reaching across the aisle could antagonize liberals fulminating against Republicans.
They didn't want to be bothered with an agitated, fulminating individual who was obviously disturbed.
Just five months ago, Democrats were left fulminating at Comey's handling of the probe into Hillary Clinton's email server.
His chief adviser, Seumas Milne, devoted much of his journalistic career at the Guardian to fulminating against American imperialism.
Despite the fulminating royal statement, every Thai knows that no one can beat the king himself for ingratitude, misbehaviour and disloyalty. ■
The other answer might be that China is now fulminating against the actions and subtly threatening access to rare earth materials.
Mr Trump, by fulminating against witch-hunts and firing off fictitious accusations against his accusers, would encourage and be strengthened by that.
He began fulminating about federal laws that prohibit American businesses from bribing officials overseas; the businesses, he said, were being unfairly penalized.
In the past, he has provoked a backlash after terror attacks by fulminating against Muslims and shifting too quickly onto the offensive.
Dan Patrick (R) appeared on Fox News Sunday morning and spent a good deal of time fulminating instead against violent video games.
But by the time she's through fulminating, grandstanding and ultimately writhing in pain, you've realized that her anger isn't random, or singular.
Tereze GluckNew York To the Editor: I agree with Nicholas Kristof that fulminating and threats from Democrats will be counterproductive in winning more elections.
Dwight D. Eisenhower (a fulminating Malcolm Sinclair) is about to give the signal for the momentous invasion that would be known as D-Day.
In speech after speech, he harangued high officials, castigated his congressional colleagues, and even alienated allies by fulminating against the influence of money in politics.
Fulminating about the canonical importance of Greedo not shooting first has metastasized into badgering fledgling stars off the internet for having the temerity to be female.
His glimmering dark fantasy world began fulminating in Mexico, where he was born, and continued in San Diego, where his family moved when he was 9.
Republicans spent decades fulminating against activist judges like Earl Warren and activist politicians like Barack Obama, claiming they were undermining the founders' vision of limited government.
Yet Mr Trump appears uninterested, preferring the political gains he makes from fulminating over the system's failings than doing the hard work of trying to fix them.
They were fulminating, about family separations, of course, at the border despite the fact that President Trump ended that policy two weekends ago, do they not read.
Pauline Hanson, a populist senator who made her name then, warning that Australia would be "swamped" by Asians, has started fulminating about Muslims instead, to little avail.
Those judgments, samples of which we're shown fulminating online and on television, are often rude and sometimes hateful toward those who have decided to live child-free.
He became a pundit of sorts, fulminating against crime in New York City and international trade and Mr. Obama's legitimacy as president, often in racially incendiary terms.
When critics aren't denouncing Aeneas's lack of personality ("a stick who would have contributed to The New Statesman ," Ezra Pound sniffed), they're fulminating against his lack of character.
Instead of arguing, everyone from next-door neighbors to members of Congress has got used to doing the I.R.L. equivalent of posting to the comments section: serially fulminating.
Where fulminating against the libs was something Nixon mostly did alone with his Scotch bottle, until it became his last-ditch defence, it is Mr Trump's main method.
An IAM spokesperson confirmed on Tuesday morning that, despite all of Trump's fulminating on Twitter about Harley's Europe decision, he has not offered a response to Martinez's letter.
At the same time, fulminating against American Muslims and playing up the chances of mass-casualty ISIS attacks misses the true reality of the threat and is self-defeating.
Fulminating with contempt for England and disdain for the daily grind, he bangs out vitriolic screeds on an old typewriter, the confrontational prose at odds with his diffident manner.
Trump added even more wild conspiracy theories as the day progressed, fulminating against the "impeachment crap," and suggesting without any evidence that the pharmaceutical industry is behind the impeachment inquiry.
When he was not fulminating about immigration over the weekend, he was lashing out at special counsel Robert Mueller and Democratic demands that all of his report should be released.
When Big Bird and Oscar occasionally performed together — bird singing ABCs, grouch fulminating — Mr. Spinney operated one puppet while an understudy handled the other, using a vocal recording by Mr. Spinney.
For all the frivolous press coverage suggesting she didn't show enough emotion, and all the right-wing fulminating over her supposed deviousness, it seems her talent for dissembling has been greatly exaggerated.
Now, suddenly, Mr. Gabbay is everywhere: kibitzing on talk shows, fulminating on Facebook, drawing crowds on college campuses and even in right-wing backwaters where Labor politicians have long feared to tread.
I've taught college English for almost two years now, and for all the fulminating against the culture of political correctness, I've never seen language scrutinized like the language of armaments and gun control.
Increasingly, Trump, the Republican President, has seemed to be running against his own Republican Party, fulminating at its leaders for failing to pass his agenda and feuding with individual lawmakers who criticize him.
CreditCreditMinzayar Oo for The New York Times GINTOTA, Sri Lanka — The Buddhist abbot was sitting cross-legged in his monastery, fulminating against the evils of Islam, when the petrol bomb exploded within earshot.
So he turned the traditional grim post-midterms presidential news conference into a sideshow while waging a base-pleasing war on the press with a fulminating display at a post-election news conference.
Very much of its day, with World War II fulminating across the European landscape, the film is based on Camille Flammarion's pre-World War I novel, Omega: The Last Days of the World.
Umar, a fierce critic of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, was about to become an example of the very practices against which she has been fulminating in her newspaper columns and her Twitter account.
The theory that the ability to sing — even dance — can survive the loss of the rational mind is stated early and hopefully in this fulminating play, directed by Mr. Bennett's frequent collaborator, Nicholas Hytner.
For nine months, he has been fulminating and tweeting about the "deep state" – sometimes the "Criminal Deep State" – hurling most of his thunderbolts at the FBI, his political paranoia annotated and amplified by Fox News.
Trump woke up Friday fulminating about what he sees as betrayal by Sessions in an extraordinary tweetstorm complaining about the Mueller probe and the attorney general's failure to open investigations into Hillary Clinton and Democrats.
Besides fulminating against Mr Trump, he has accordingly espoused a raft of populist economic policies, designed to appeal to left-wing activists, though they would have little or no chance of making it through Virginia's assembly.
In case you're rubbing your eyes: Yes, not long ago many Sanders supporters were fulminating about how Hillary was going to steal the nomination by having superdelegates put her over the top despite losing the primaries.
She'll be flanked by a band of young musicians, performing tunes from her latest album, the jagged and fulminating "A Woman at the End of the World," from 2016, which sounds like nothing she's made before.
Last summer, I could start a conversation with just about any lesbian or gay man by fulminating (in an amused tone) about the heterosexual invasion, saying that the straight people just aren't scared of us any longer.
Every Trump-engineered outrage ends the same way, with his critics fulminating and the President untouched and unrepentant, reinforcing his brand as a flamethrower torching the structures of Washington governance, as he promised his fans he would.
If Trump elects to fight back—as he is notoriously likely to—with a series of fulminating and belittling tirades, this might afford his female challengers in the 2020 field the opportunity to seem strong and presidential.
But Mr. Trump seems incapable of perceiving the threat, while Republicans in Congress spend their time fulminating not about the assault on American sovereignty, but about the private text messages of an F.B.I. agent investigating that attack.
Directed with high bombast by Sidney Lumet, with a fulminating script by Paddy Chayefsky, "Network" tapped into the populist rage of a post-Nixon society, suspicious of all authority and stressed to the end of its tether.
Trump has spent the past year and change publicly fulminating about his attorney general and the "'Justice' Department," and their failure to prosecute Hillary Clinton for unspecified alleged crimes after the FBI cleared her of criminal wrongdoing in 2016.
The danger is that by fulminating against the errors of his predecessors and puffing himself up as the one who will do what it takes, Trump is boxing himself in and creating pressure -- including political pressure -- to act rashly.
Despite detonating double political explosions in Washington, the two senators, who are both standing down after next year's mid-term elections, failed to breach the dam holding back fulminating establishment anger at Trump, who retains rock solid support from his GOP base voters.
Today it's more riveting than terrifying, with a first-rate Great War exhibit that includes a recreated trench from the front lines, and an equally excellent Holocaust exhibition, with a gripping history of the rise of Hitler and footage of a fulminating Goebbels.
Before the summer was out, reporters were fulminating over his description of the Vietnam War as a "noble cause" and his suggestion that the United States should pursue official relations with Taiwan — a move that contradicted the terms of normalization previously negotiated between the United States and China.
Omar Abdel Rahman, the blind Islamic cleric whose fulminating sermons inspired violent fundamentalist movements in Egypt and, an American court found, a 212 plot for a bombing rampage in New York, died on Saturday at a federal prison near Raleigh, N.C., where he was serving a life sentence.
By 1914, a large number of works by van Gogh had appeared illustrated in books in Germany, and thanks to the dedication of Johanna and German gallery owners, critics, and museum directors, van Gogh's fulminating brushwork came to be perceived as one of the most prominent harbingers of German Expressionist painting — establishing his key inspirational role for the German modern art avant-garde.
So far, Mr. Netanyahu has managed to keep the rebels largely at bay by encouraging his political base to rage against the criminal justice system, fulminating against the news media and political rivals to his left, and dangling promises to the right that if he keeps job, he can capitalize on his close ties to the Trump administration to deliver historic achievements, including annexing territory in the occupied West Bank.
The president, who has spent a year and a half fulminating against his attorney general in public, finally got traction on Capitol Hill thanks to the growing frustration of a handful of GOP senators with their former colleague – most importantly, Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley and South Carolina's Lindsey Graham, who have been irritated by Sessions' opposition to a criminal justice reform bill they support, according to interviews with more than a half-dozen congressional GOP aides, Trump advisers, and Republicans close to the White House.
All things in this his fulminating bull are not of so innoxious a tendency.
Silver fulminate is often confused with silver nitride, silver azide, or fulminating silver. "Fulminating silver", though always referring to an explosive silver-containing substance, is an ambiguous term. While it may be a synonym of silver fulminate, it may also refer to the nitride or azide, the decomposition product of Tollen's reagent, or an alchemical mixture, which does not contain the fulminate anion.
Gremuchiy (, literally: Fulminating) is a spring and a nature monument that is situated in Western part of Zheleznodorozhny District of Rostov-on-Don, Russia.
Recent EXAFS (Extended X-Ray Absorption Find Structure) analyses by Joannis Psilitelis has shown that fulminating gold is a square planar tetraamminegold(III) cation with either four or one gold atoms in the second coordination sphere. This geometry is supported by the diamagnetic character of fulminating gold. Since it has a d8 electron configuration and is diamagnetic, it must have a square planar geometry.(Steinhauser, et al.
According to police he had in his possession at the time of his arrest, a loaded revolver, a sharpened file and a fulminating cap, used to detonate bombs.
While being handled and during the planting of the mine a safety pin prevented the spring from accidentally triggering the fulminating charge. This pin was removed after the mine was in position. The only major drawback of the ‘Singer’ was that the spring mechanism was exposed to the water. When deployed in salt water sea growth would eventually develop on the spring mechanism, effectively preventing it from striking the fulminating charge within the mine.
In the early, or fulminating form (purpura variolosa), the prodrome occurred with fulminating severity, with severe headache, backache and high fever. A bright erythema soon appears, spreading across the body, becoming dusky and "lobster-like". Hemorrhaging appeared soon after as sub-conjunctival bleeding turned the whites of the eyes deep red. Early-onset hemorrhagic smallpox also produced petechiae, and hemorrhages in the spleen, kidney, serosa, muscle, and, rarely, the epicardium, liver, testes, ovaries and bladder.
The secessionists had in front of them Ștefan Luchian who had the endorsement of Nicolae Grigorescu. They launched a fulminating manifesto revealing the idea of emancipating artists under the tutelage of official art.
Ammonia causes the explosive polymerisation of ethylene oxide. It also forms explosive fulminating compounds with compounds of gold, silver, mercury, germanium or tellurium, and with stibine. Violent reactions have also been reported with acetaldehyde, hypochlorite solutions, potassium ferricyanide and peroxides.
Due to the massive interest in the study of fulminating gold in the early and middling eras of chemistry, there are many ways to synthesize it.(Steinhauser, et al. 2008), p 308. Not all synthesis routes yield the same product.
Due to the explosive tendency of this compound, industrial techniques for extracting and purifying gold compounds are very few. There was a novel biogas extraction of precious metals from scrapped electronics that worked very well, but the creation of fulminating gold and other precious metal amines limits its widespread use. However, there are patents and methods that use fulminating gold as an intermediate in a process of turning low-purity gold into high- purity gold for electronics.Tom, T.; Kim, M.J.; Jung, B.H.; Kook, N.P.; Park, I.Y.; Ahn, J.U.; Method for manufacturing high-purity gold with low-purity gold, K.R. Patent 2,009,031,006, 2009.
Carl Wilhelm Scheele found and proved that ammonia was what drove the formation of the complex and that upon detonation the gas formed was primarily nitrogen gas. Jean Baptiste Dumas went further and found that in addition to gold and nitrogen, fulminating gold also had hydrogen and chlorine in it. He then decomposed a ground sample with copper (II) oxide to find that it was a salt with an ammonium cation and a gold nitrogen complex as the anion. Ernst Weitz continued studying the compound with state of the art techniques and concluded that fulminating gold was a mixture of "diamido-imido-aurichloride" and 2Au(OH)3.3NH3.
Senator Bricker was embittered by the defeat. "By the mid-1950s," wrote the Senator's biographer, "Bricker had become alienated from the mainstream of his own party... fulminating on the far right of the political spectrum." Decades after his defeat he was still furious. "Ike did it!" he said.
After they formed, they self-produced and released a five track EP, "The Fabulous" in 2004. In May 2006, they released their debut album "Arrangements For Fulminating Vective" on Lambgoat Records. The album was mixed by Eric Rachel and mastered by Alan Douches. In June 2008, vocalist Tony Saputo left the band.
Silver carbonate can be prepared by combining aqueous solutions of sodium carbonate with a deficiency of silver nitrate. :2 AgNO3(aq) + Na2CO3(aq) → Ag2CO3(s) + 2 NaNO3(aq) Freshly prepared silver carbonate is colourless, but the solid quickly turns yellow. Silver carbonate reacts with ammonia to give the explosive fulminating silver. With hydrofluoric acid, it gives silver fluoride.
Luminous discharge tubes. Lorraine collections of the Museo Galileo, Florence The luminous discharge tubes is part of an electric machine. Two small tubes, known as "electric serpents" or "fulminating tubes", were popular in the late eighteenth century because of the spectacular effect that they produced in the dark. The electric snake consists of two glass tubes, one inside the other.
But Nashe also portrays Pierce as something of an arrogant and prodigal fool. The story is told in a style that is complex, witty, fulminating, extemporaneous, digressive, anecdotal, filled with wicked descriptions, and peppered with newly minted words and Latin phrases. The satire can be mocking and bitingly sharp, and at times Nashe’s style seems to relish its own obscurity.’’The Columbia Encyclopedia.’’ Columbia University Press.
Georg Imdahl wrote in the Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger: "In the 60s Richter painted his first colour grids as an attack against the falsehood and piety, how abstraction was celebrated, with phoney reverence; downright fulminating against "devotional art" and "religious applied arts", as which the grids were celebrated".„Die göttlichen Farbpixel“, Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger, 24. August 2007. Master builder Barbara Schock-Werner: "Stained glass can only be done on the premises".
She continued to support the cause of Cuban independence from her exile. At the age of 69 in 1901 she was about to return to her native country but contracted fulminating bronchopneumonia and died before she could begin her journey. Her remains were buried in Spain until 1968. In that year they were set in the pantheon of the Revolutionary Armed Forces, in the Cemetery Colón in Havana.
Jöns Jacob Berzelius, a leading chemist of the era and contemporary of John Dalton, was one such person. He had a beaker explode in his hand, damaging it and his eyes for several years.M. Speter, Nitrocellulose, 1930, 1, 128 It wasn't until Johann Rudolf Glauber in the 17th century that fulminating gold started to have uses. He used the purple fumes after detonation to plate objects in gold.
Castillo represented his country in 13 FIFA World Cup qualification matches and he played at the 1997 Copa América, where he scored a goal in the semi-final against Mexico national football team. Bolivia were runners-up after losing 1–3 in the final against Brazil. Castillo missed the final game due to the sudden death of his 7-year-old son José Manuel to fulminating hepatitis. His son died two days later.
Medical needs. In clinical medical practice, it may be difficult to distinguish between treatment a patient needs; treatment that may be desirable;and treatment that could be deemed frivolous. At one end of this spectrum, any practising clinician would accept that a child with fulminating meningococcal meningitis - say - "NEEDS" rapid access to medical care, including resuscitation and intravenous antimicrobials. At the other, rarely could a young healthy woman be deemed to "need" breast augmentation.
The next morning, the team discovers that Park has fulminating osteomyelitis, in which the infected tissue of his jaw broke off, blocking blood flow to the brain but it was hidden from the scans by Harvey's metal plate. Later that evening, House goes to talk to both Annette and Park about how they need to stop their activity. Park asks House if his parents came to see him. House leaves the room speechless.
United States Naval Ordnance Laboratory, 1962. pg26. The automatic fuse consisted of a heavy metal cap that would be released by the force of a ship impacting it. As the cap was released it triggered a spring mechanism that struck a fulminating charge, in the form of a percussion cap, which detonated the main explosive. It was one of the first mines equipped with a safety mechanism to prevent an accidental explosion.
He left the paper in August 2005, shortly after his editor Jeff Koyen was forced out over the article. Taibbi defended the piece as "off- the-cuff burlesque of truly tasteless jokes," written to give his readers a break from a long run of his "fulminating political essays". Taibbi also said he was surprised at the vehement reactions to what he wrote "in the waning hours of a Vicodin haze"."Keep Pope Alive" , March 16, 2005, New York Press.
Deaths from diazomethane poisoning have been reported. In one instance a laboratory worker consumed a hamburger near a fumehood where he was generating a large quantity of diazomethane, and died four days later from fulminating pneumonia.LeWinn, E.B. "Diazomethane Poisoning: Report of a fatal case with autopsy", The American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 1949, 218, 556-562. Like any other alkylating agent it is expected to be carcinogenic, but such concerns are overshadowed by its serious acute toxicity.
Among Gargallo's works are three pieces based on Greta Garbo: "Masque de Greta Garbo à la mèche," "Tête de Greta Garbo avec chapeau," and "Masque de Greta Garbo aux cils." Together with Dídac Masana, Gargallo sculpted the great arch over the front of the stage of the Palau de la Música Catalana in Barcelona. The work depicts the Ride of the Valkyries in Richard Wagner's opera Die Walküre (The Valkyries). Gargallo suffered from fulminating bronchial pneumonia and died in Reus, Tarragona.
In early hemorrhagic smallpox, death occurs suddenly about six days after the fever develops. Cause of death in early hemorrhagic cases involved heart failure, sometimes accompanied by pulmonary edema. In late hemorrhagic cases, high and sustained viremia, severe platelet loss and poor immune response were often cited as causes of death. In flat smallpox modes of death are similar to those in burns, with loss of fluid, protein and electrolytes beyond the capacity of the body to replace or acquire, and fulminating sepsis.
According to Steinhauser et al. and Ernst Weitz, a very homogeneous sample can be obtained by hydrolysis of [Au(NH3)4](NO3)3with Cl^-. They have also noted that different synthetic routes, as well as using different amount of ammonia when precipitating the product, leads to different ratios of Au, N, H, and Cl. Due to its physical and chemical properties, fulminating gold cannot be crystallized under normal methods, making determining the crystal structure a hassle. From extensive attempts at crystallization by Steinhauser et al.
While he professed that his intentions were to support the Malays who were generally of a more impoverished background, his views were misconstrued as ultra-nationalism and his success was partially, if not intentionally, due to fulminating feelings regarding the Malay identity. In 1982, Suhaimi lost the leadership of UMNO Youth after the fledgling politician Anwar Ibrahim wrested the control of the movement from him by a slim 10-vote majority in a bitterly fought contest. Anwar received 183, compared to Suhaimi's 173, with Hang Tuah Arshad receiving only 3 votes.
A remarkable passage in the Dürr-i Meknûn is Yazıcıoğlu's fulminating against the deer- and spring-worshipping by Ottomans, a heathen cult within the empire. Another important passage in this book is a tale about Kenan (Ken‘an), one of the sons of Nuh (Noah). Kenan refuses to join his father in the Ark, and hopes to survive the Great Flood in a kind of diving bell that he devises himself. God punishes him for his disobedience with a supernatural bladder infection and Ken'an drowns in his urine inside his own contraption.
There are three varieties of the disease: the asymptomatic form occurs when copper accumulates but there are no clinical symptoms of the disorder; the fulminating form which is seen mostly in young dogs, causes death in two to three days, and is thought to be caused by stress; and the chronic form, which is characterized by an extended period of time in which liver disease slowly causes the death of the dog. Bedlingtons also have a tendency to accumulate iron in the liver, but not nearly to the extent that they accumulate copper.
The pathogenic nature of E. histolytica was first reported by Fedor A. Lösch in 1875, but it was not given its Latin name until Fritz Schaudinn described it in 1903. E. histolytica, as its name suggests (histo–lytic = tissue destroying), is pathogenic; infection can be asymptomatic or can lead to amoebic dysentery or amoebic liver abscess. Symptoms can include fulminating dysentery, bloody diarrhea, weight loss, fatigue, abdominal pain, and amoeboma. The amoeba can actually 'bore' into the intestinal wall, causing lesions and intestinal symptoms, and it may reach the blood stream.
This land was especially suited to winter building because it had already been cleared, and the tall hills provided a good defensive position. The cleared village was known as Patuxet to the Wampanoag people and was abandoned about three years earlier following a plague that killed all of its residents. The "Indian fever" involved hemorrhaging and is assumed to have been fulminating smallpox. The outbreak had been severe enough that the colonists discovered unburied skeletons in the dwellings. The exploratory party returned to the Mayflower, anchored away,John (1895).
Even if the current club was founded in 2013, the history of football from Recea started back in 1959, when Dinamo Săsar, club based in the village of Săsar, Recea Commune, was founded. The team was in tight relation which Dinamo București, having a fulminating ascent and promoting in the second league at the end of the 1959–60 season. The club played for two years in the second tier, then relegated and never came back. ACSF Comuna Recea was founded in 2013 as AS Comuna Recea and was enrolled in the fourth tier, Liga IV, South series.
He was the favorite pupil of Titian, and approached nearer to his style than any other member of the family. There are several pictures by him in the Doge's palace, among the best an allegory in the ante-chamber to the Sala del Gran Consiglio. Another good example is a picture in the Sala della Bussola, Doge Leonardo Donato before the Virgin and Infant Christ. He also painted for churches at Venice, Treviso, and in the Friuli, among other things a Christ fulminating the world, and The Virgin on Earth Sending the Two Founders Dominic and Francis for the church of San Zaniopolo at Venice.
Fulminating gold was the first high explosive known to man and was first noted in western alchemy as early as 1585. Sebald Schwaerzer was the first to isolate this compound and comment on its characteristics in his book Chrysopoeia Schwaertzeriana. Schwaerzer's production required dissolving a sample of gold in aqua regia, adding ammonium chloride to the saturated solution, and precipitating the solution through lead spheres and drying over oil of tartar. Chemists of the 16th and 17th centuries were very interested in the novelty of an explosive gold compound, so it should be no surprise that many chemists of the era were injured upon its detonation.
He was involved in making theater props, moving statues and in plans to build a new theater in London. He worked on producing torpedoes, naval mines, detonators that used glass Batavian tears, and worked on fulminating gold (aurum fulminans) as an explosive. He was known for his Perpetuum Mobile, built an incubator for eggs and a portable stove/oven with an optimal use of fuel, able to keep the heat on a constant temperature by means of a regulator/thermostat. He designed a solar energy system for London (perpetual fire), demonstrated air- conditioning, made lightning and thunder ‘on command’, and developed fountains and a fresh water supply for the city of Middelburg.
Pierre Laval, aware of Luchaire's friendly relations with Abetz, sent him to Paris in July 1940 to re-establish contact with him. Luchaire consistently maintained that he represented a certain respectable "rightist" anti-British French political tradition. He founded a further newspaper, the evening daily Les Nouveaux Temps, in 1940, and subsequently became the President of the Association de la presse parisienne (Association of the Parisian Press) in 1941 and presided the Corporation nationale de la presse française (National Corporation of French Press). During the occupation, however, it was claimed that Luchaire dished out Nazi propaganda, fulminating against England, America, de Gaulle, the Soviet Union, Bolshevism and the Maquis.Werth, 1956, p.131.
Alexander Gorchakov In 1863, the Russian Army had perfected a fulminating musketball that could explode when it hit a hard target and was designed to blow up powder magazines or ammunition wagons. In 1867, they perfected an improved explosive musketball that would detonate on any impact after being fired, even soft targets like people or animals. Predicting the disastrous effect of such a discovery on diplomatic relations with their neighbors, Russia decided to negotiate a ban on the development, creation, and use of such weapons before a grisly arms race commenced. Upon the invitation of the Russian diplomat and statesman Prince Alexander Gorchakov, for the purpose of considering the existing rules of war, a conference of delegates met at Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire, in December 1868.
" David E. Bernstein, Foundation Professor at the George Mason University School of Law, criticized Walt in 2011 for accepting funding from the Libyan government for a trip to Libya in which he addressed that country's Economic Development Board and then wrote what Bernstein called "a puff piece" about his visit. Bernstein said it was ironic that "Walt, after fulminating about the American domestic 'Israel Lobby'" had thus become "a part of the 'Libya lobby'". Bernstein also found it ironic that "Walt, a leading critic of the friendship the U.S. and Israel, concludes his piece with the hope 'that the United States and Libya continue to nurture and build a constructive relationship.' Because, you know, Israel is so much nastier than Qaddafi's Libya.
Finally, in the sixteenth century it was Beuter who noticed that he had found the legend of Wilfred the Hairy and the blood bars in some alleged "manuscripts" he gave no further data from. Although it cannot be imputed with absolute certainty that Beuter was the creator of the legend, it seems rather clear that the alleged "manuscript" source was either remitting to an earlier source, or it was a subterfuge to avoid any subsequent critique. The Valencian Legend of the Four Blood Bars was an immediate and fulminating success that was copied by all the later historians that made it a true story. It was not until 1812 that the Catalan historian Joan de Sans i de Barutell discredited any truth in the Valencian legend of the four bars.
The delegates affirmed that the only legitimate object of war should be to weaken the military force of the enemy, which could be sufficiently accomplished by the employment of highly destructive weapons. With that fact established, the delegates agreed to prohibit the use of less deadly explosives that might merely injure the combatants and thereby create prolonged suffering of such combatants. The Great Powers agreed to renounce, in case of war among themselves, the use "by their military or naval troops of any projectile of a weight below 400 grams (14 ounces avoirdupois), which is either explosive or charged with fulminating or inflammable substances." While the declaration bans the use of fragmenting, explosive, or incendiary small arms ammunition, it does not prohibit such ammunition for use in autocannon or artillery rounds.
At the same time the Suez Crisis was taking place, the world was also captivated by the Hungarian Revolution and the subsequent crushing of the revolt by intervening Soviet forces. Russell attracted criticism for speaking out fervently against the Suez war while ignoring Soviet repression in Hungary, to which he responded that he did not criticise the Soviets "because there was no need. Most of the so-called Western World was fulminating". Although he later feigned a lack of concern, at the time he was disgusted by the brutal Soviet response, and on 16 November 1956, he expressed approval for a declaration of support for Hungarian scholars which Michael Polanyi had cabled to the Soviet embassy in London twelve days previously, shortly after Soviet troops had already entered Budapest.
In 1921 the Suikerbond, a conservative trade union representing the interests of "European workers in the sugar industry",Ingleson 69. founded De Indische Courant, published first in Surabaya, East-Java, and then also from Weltevreden, West-Java. From the beginning, the publishers were in conflict with Aneta, the Dutch news agency (partly financed by the Dutch government) which brought international news to the islands via telegraph and thus greatly improved and simplified the news gathering done up to that point by the local papers themselves. The contracts (wurgcontracten, or "strangle contracts") Aneta signed with these papers, however, were frequently seen as restrictive; for example, the agency required papers to buy and distribute its own newsletter, De Zweep ("The Whip"), in which Aneta's founder settled personal scores by fulminating under the pseudonym Jan Karwats ("John the Scourge").
No. 106 fuze The British Army's first useful impact fuze for high-explosive shells was the Fuze No. 106 of World War I. (illus.) This used a simple protruding plunger or striker at the nose, which was pushed back to drive a firing pin into the detonator. Its ability to burst immediately at ground level was used to clear the barbed wire entanglements of no man's land, rather than burying itself first and leaving a deep, but useless, crater. The striker was protected by a safety cap that was removed before loading, but there was no other safety mechanism. The simplest form of artillery contact fuze is a soft metal nose to the shell, filled with a fulminating explosive such as lead azide. An example is the British World War II Fuze, Percussion, D.A., No. 233Fuze D.A. No. 233Fletcher, Churchill Tank, pp.
The Union of Venus and Bacchus, 1639, Dallas Museum of Art Nicolas Chaperon (Châteaudun, bapt. 19 October 1612 — Lyon 1656) was a French painter, draughtsman and engraver, a student in Paris of Simon Vouet whose style he adopted before he was further matured by his stay in Rome (1642–51) in the studio of Nicolas Poussin. In 1653-55 the consuls de Lyon called him to decorate the hôtel de ville but Chaperon dying almost as soon as he arrived, the commission passed to Thomas Blanchet. Chaperon made a name for himself with his suite of engravings after the Raphael Loggie of the Vatican, Rome, 1649, but art historians remember him for the stream of fulminating invective with which Poussin in his correspondence with Paul Fréart de Chantelou described this unruly and vindictive practician who refused to carry through his copy of a Transfiguration.
However, Allenby later formally raised concerns with Haig about Keir's front-line dispositions of VI Corps in the line around Arras in August 1916, and Haig supported Allenby's assessment that Keir was an indifferent General (augmented by an inherent prejudice that Haig possessed towards older Generals, Keir having just turned 60),'Douglas Haig: War Diaries & Letters 1914-1918', by G. Sheffield & J. Bourne (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2005), entry regarding Keir's dismissal, 8 August 1916, P.217. and despite Keir's threats to Haig to appeal to higher authority against the decision in England if he was deprived of his command in the field and forcefully returned home, protesting that he had been wronged by Allenby's action, Haig removed him thence.MacDonald, p. 506 On return to England Keir was sidelined and without a command, and spent the remainder of the war fulminating about the role of privileged "cavalry generals" (such as Haig and Allenby), whom he argued held a disproportionate number of senior posts in the British Expeditionary Force compared to infantrymen, gunners and engineers.
Adalward could only supply evidence of accreditation by the Archbishop of Hamburg-Bremen, whereas Osmund claimed that his own authority came from the papacy, and presumably was able to produce convincing documentation to that effect, though it emerged from examination of the evidence that he had not actually received ordination at Rome, but from 'a certain archbishop of Poland'. The delegation from Bremen was obliged to return home, fulminating against Osmund in the defamatory terms which were in due course introduced to the public domain in the third book of Master Adam's history of his archdiocese. However, already at the time of the original public controversy, at least one person present expressed strong disapproval of Osmund, maintaining that he was a promulgator of 'unsound teaching of our faith' and Stenkil, King Emund's son-in-law and eventual successor, thought well enough of Adalward to offer him some assistance with his return journey. Furthermore, public opinion in Sweden was to prove very volatile: the death of King Emund's son and heir by poisoning during a military expedition, combined with a disastrous harvest and famine (probably in 1056-7),Trillmich 1961, p.

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