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inflammable    音标拼音: [ɪnfl'æməbəl]
a. 易燃的,易怒的

易燃的,易怒的

inflammable
adj 1: easily ignited [synonym: {flammable}, {inflammable}]

Inflammable \In*flam"ma*ble\, a. [CF. F. inflammable.]
1. Capable of being easily set fire; easily enkindled;
combustible; as, inflammable oils or spirits.
[1913 Webster]

2. Excitable; irritable; irascible; easily provoked; as, an
inflammable temper.
[1913 Webster]

{Inflammable air}, the old chemical name for hydrogen.
[1913 Webster]


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  • meaning - Is it inflammable or flammable? - English Language Usage . . .
    Inflammable, derived from the verb inflame, is the original word But because the first syllable is easily misinterpreted as the common negative prefix in- (as in, for example, inescapable, invulnerable, inorganic), the word has always caused confusion
  • meaning - Difference between inflammable and flammable - English . . .
    The Free Dictionary advises using only flammable to give warnings: Usage Note: Historically, flammable and inflammable mean the same thing However, the presence of the prefix in- has misled many people into assuming that inflammable means "not flammable" or "noncombustible " The prefix in- in inflammable is not, however, the Latin negative prefix in-, which is related to the English un- and
  • orthography - What is the history of the spelling imflammable (with M . . .
    The etymology of inflammable is from the French root inflammable, in turn from the Latin - related to the verb inflame Etymology: representing Latin type *inflammābilis , < inflammāre (see inflame v and -ble suffix); perhaps immediately < French inflammable (Cotgrave 1611)
  • etymology - Why are not infamous and inflammable the opposite of . . .
    Why are not infamous and inflammable the opposite of famous and flammable, like incomplete, inactivity, inappropriate and so on?
  • meaning - Flammable versus Combustible - English Language Usage . . .
    Moi aussi I see some irony in the fact that the NFPA, which is widely credited with having spearheaded the movement to popularize flammable in the 1920s (see the entry for flammable inflammable in Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of English Usage [1994]), is now having trouble getting the U S public to understand the degree of danger that it intends the term Flammable to convey
  • What words sound like opposites but are synonyms?
    Somewhat related to this question, I am curious to know what words in English would seem to be opposites at first blush but are in fact synonyms? Immediately I can think of flammable and inflammable
  • What is funny in Inflammable - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The joke arises from the fact that "inflammable" and "flammable" are synonymous (that is, they have the same meaning ) Normally the prefix "in" makes the root word have the opposite meaning, as in: "justice injustice", "sensitive insensitive", "eligible ineligible " etc Mistaking this inversion makes the non native English speaker think that the "inflammable" gas is the opposite of flammable
  • If in- forms antonyms, why is invaluable not the opposite of . . .
    Inflammable means flammable can combust in French French doesn't have the word flammable for some reason (nothing seems inherently "wrong" with it, it just doesn't exist) To denote flameproof, you have "ininflammable" - yes, double ins not not So at least for this word, blame whatever language originally sourced the mess (French? Latin?)
  • single word requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The words flammable and inflammable mean the same thing, but (to someone unfamiliar with their meaning) appear to be opposites (because of the quot;in quot; prefix) Is there a name for such word
  • Difference between unto and to - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    To did not come from unto (if anything, vice versa), so the situation is not the same as with flammable and inflammable Though to is an older form, unto was never as prevalent, and is now either archaic, or used in limited contexts, such as shown here (Idiom: unto itself)





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