You can sue for anything these days, but check with a personal injury attorney before you waste time and money, unless he can prove negligence or a defective core, I wouldn't think you have a case.
Hose going from engine to heater core may have burst. Check all your coolant hoses for leaks.
The coolant leaks out.
the petroleum is used as fuel. it is burned, letting out a burst of energy
the velocity of the metals and the engine is going to be in his bad behavior.
The water balloon burst from the pressure of being squeezed too tightly.
Assuming you still have some form of coolant (water) in your radiator then the coolant will freeze when the weather is cold enough, coolant expands when it freezes, this may cause permanent damage to your engine, such as split pipe's, burst radiator, cracked engine block
If its an electric water heater normally around the elements, Gas at a weld or relief valve.
This could be numerous factors, however, the most likely of factors would be either the TP valve leaking or the hot water heater irtself is leaking (burst).
Generally this is caused by pressure being built up from the water getting hot in the hot water heater. By code you should have a hot water heater expansion tank on the cold water inlet of the water heater to absorb the added pressure. If this is your problem, the excessive pressure could possibly burst your water heater. The faucet stem or cartridge or washer may be loose or moving and blocking flow.
Either your heater matrix (small radiator behind dash) or, more likely, a hose going into it has burst. Your heater won't work any more as all the hot water (the steam!) has came out of it. easy but awkward fix, do it yourself though, it's easy and will save you a small fortune.
This depends mostly on the yield of the bomb, the burst type (air, surface, shallow subsurface, deep subsurface), and the slant range from the burst to the human being. Other factors are type of construction near the human being, clothing worn by the human being, weather at burst location, etc.
The simple past of burst is "burst" and the past participle is also "burst."