firestorm

આ આગમાં
definition
noun
within the firestorm every building was burned to a shell
an intense and destructive fire (typically one caused by bombing) in which strong currents of air are drawn into the blaze, making it burn more fiercely.
example
Promoting abstinence in America carries a guarantee of being ridiculed in a 'firestorm' of controversy.
A 'firestorm' swept across the city. 75 per cent of all buildings suffered severe structural damage.
the incident ignited a 'firestorm' of controversy
This accident, and the subsequent investigation, sparked a 'firestorm' of protests.
But French executives know even modest job cuts will ignite a political 'firestorm' .
A bombing raid on Hamburg resulted in a 'firestorm' that killed more than 50,000 people.
This paper will generate a 'firestorm' of controversy, wide media interest, and perhaps even calls for a public inquiry.
Together, they have produced a book that has ignited a 'firestorm' in Great Britain that is almost certain to spread to the United States.
These created so much fire that a 'firestorm' developed.
In parts of the city, the fires joined up to create a 'firestorm' .
It ignited a national 'firestorm' of protest by civil rights and women's groups.
the incident ignited a 'firestorm' of controversy
The inscription on the monument generated a 'firestorm' of controversy.
within the 'firestorm' every building was burned to a shell
The audio on the originally released disc caused a 'firestorm' of controversy.
A 'firestorm' would result: the heat in the central area rises so high that the fire consumes all available oxygen.
My grandfather vanished in one of the 'firestorms' that raged in Tokyo during the American bombing campaigns.
Radio warnings effectively mobilized fire brigades and civil defence workers but neither could control the 'firestorms' which swept across northern Tokyo.
Army assistance was at the bushfire's front line less than a day after 'firestorms' devastated Canberra's western suburbs on January 18.
Some of the greatest losses in Los Alamos occurred not in 'firestorms' but from lower-intensity surface fires.
Oxygen in the atmosphere will burn with this inbound debris and ignite superheated atmospheric 'firestorms' that will consume much oxygen.
The massive quake killed more than 140,000 people as buildings collapsed and 'firestorms' turned the capital into a raging inferno.
Only one minute long, it killed 3,000 people and ignited 'firestorms' that burned for three days, forever changing the face of the Bay Area.
Credits: Google Translate