燃烧英语怎么说
Peter's heart was afire with his colorful life.
No search engine gives you the smell of a crime, the tremor in the air, the eyes that smolder, or the cadence of a scream.
Sleep and dreams had fallen away, along with, she suddenly realized, her first husband, whose hand she'd been holding in the burning building.
Lillehammer's opening ceremonies featured a giant Olympic Torch burning biogas produced by rotting vegetation.
Unburnt vegetation rots quickly, but black carbon persists in the soil for many centuries.
Drax, Britain's largest emitter of carbon dioxide, could stop burning coal by the end of the decade.
It means that the burning petrol was spilt over into the heads of the crew.
Andrew knew how to damp the flaming fire down.
The sailors abandoned the burning ship.
Smoke surged from the burning building.
Absence to love is as wind to fire, it distinguishes small, it flames the great.
The coal is heaped and burned, often by the miners' wives, and then sold door-to-door as cooking fuel.
You need something to light the fire, the ball to drop invitingly in the box, and you get your name on the scoresheet.
Plus, the resistant starch in potatoes help your body burn fat, too.
In winter, your body burns more calories to keep you warm, Cross-country skiing, for instance, burns somewhere between 500 and 700 calories an hour.
But it's my ill-gotten property gains that have been the fuel to fire my fantasies.
It comes from a variety of sources, including fossil fuel production and even farming. Cows give off methane, ya know, after they eat.
It was the best I remember, the glowing sun sat at the end of a beautiful corridor of trees making it look like they were on fire.
The energy is released by combustion on the application of a match.
A site containing a deposit, estimated to be nearly 500,000 years old, consisting of charcoal, burned animal bones, and charred rocks, has recently been found.
In the fields of sorghum, lift the burning torch, rice smiled bent the waist, blossoming white cotton, soybean Lilibao…
In this so-called "fire tetrahedron", heat breaks the chemical bonds of the fuel's hydrocarbon chains.
When a hydrocarbon is burned, these bonds break apart in order to form carbon dioxide and water.
Hardwoods such as hickory, oak and ash also burn well.
When Stevenson followed the carbon-14 trail back in time, he found carbon-4 levels change with the intensity of solar burning.