flammable
[ flam-uh-buh l ]
/ ˈflæm ə bəl /
adjective
easily set on fire; combustible; inflammable.
Origin of flammable
1805–15; < Latin
flammā(re) to set on fire +
-ble
usage note for flammable
See
inflammable.
OTHER WORDS FROM flammable
flam·ma·bil·i·ty, nounWords nearby flammable
flamingo,
flamingo-flower,
flaminian way,
flamininus,
flaminius,
flammable,
flammarion,
flamsteed,
flamy,
flan,
flan ring
Example sentences from the Web for flammable
That can happen, according to the report, when (flammable) methane leaks out of fracking wells and into drinking water.
He doused himself with two plastic bottles of flammable liquids, and he set himself on fire.
Suicidal Anti-war Protest Shocks Japan as It Rethinks Pacifist Constitution |Angela Erika Kubo, Jake Adelstein |June 30, 2014 |DAILY BEASTHearings for Supreme Court justices, decisions of war, flammable federal scandals.
Senate Panel Quizzes Secret Service Director Mark Sullivan on Colombian Prostitutes |Daniel Stone |May 23, 2012 |DAILY BEAST
British Dictionary definitions for flammable
flammable
/ (ˈflæməbəl) /
adjective
liable to catch fire; readily combustible; inflammable
Derived forms of flammable
flammability, nounusage for flammable
Flammable and
inflammable are interchangeable when used of the properties of materials.
Flammable is, however, often preferred for warning labels as there is less likelihood of misunderstanding (
inflammable being sometimes taken to mean
not flammable).
Inflammable is preferred in figurative contexts:
this could prove to be an inflammable situation