Yes because within 20 years of the patent of dynamite, 66,500 tons of dynamite were produced.
No, flashlight and dynamite do not rhyme because they have different vowel sounds in their endings. Flashlight ends with "light" while dynamite ends with "mite".
Stopped used the dynamite by Jeoporty
Dynamite was used in World War 1, but stopped using it during World War 2
No because dynamite only contains saw dust and nitroglycerin.
Alfred Nobel patented dynamite in 1868, and an additional patent was issued to Morse in 1880, for a slightly different formula.
Dynamite and California rolls are a Western type of Sushi. The dynamite rolls are especially good because they are made with tempura.
it is by snipo snapo
Dynamite can "sweat" when its old. Its called sweating because the nitroglycerine slips out of the upsorbend material.
No, because dynamiteisnot a propernoun.
Napoleon Dynamite is all things good in the world put into a damn movie.
yes
Hmm. That's an interesting question. You could say that it is Swedish because its inventor (Alfred Nobel) was Swedish, or you could say it is German because that is where the first dynamite was developed... or you could say that each stick of dynamite has a nationality based on where it was manufactured, since it is manufactured all over the world. Truly, though, dynamite is just a tool used by people, and it doesn't care where it is or who is using it. It just does what is it supposed to do and blows stuff up. It has no nationality.