Inflammable, contrary to the more common usage, actually means able to burn, which is actually confusing when working with combustible and noncombustible chemicals.
The meaning of flammable is able to be easy ignited; inflammable is the antonym of flammable.
The term "inflammable" is neutral, as it simply indicates that a substance is capable of being easily ignited and burning. It does not carry a positive or negative connotation.
Yes. it is inflammable.
An inflammable liquid is a substance that can easily catch fire and burn at relatively low temperatures. Examples include gasoline, alcohol, and lighter fluid. It is important to handle and store inflammable liquids carefully to prevent accidents and fires.
All alcohols are inflammable. It is only if they are diluted that they are not.
The verb of inflammable is inflame. As in "to inflame something".
The substance is said to be either flammable, inflammable, combustible.
Nonflammable is something that won't catch on fire.
If you're asking about what word it is, it's simply Inflammable. But if you're asking how they are Inflammable, then it would be because the molecules are moving just to slow in the object not on fire. By increasing the molecule movement speed, you increase the temperature, depending on how fast they are vibrating.
We had to keep the gasoline soaked rags away from the sparks because gasoline is so inflammable. Remember that inflammable and flammable mean the same thing. It can burn.
Flammable and inflammable are the same thing. Sawdust is flammable
Inflammable Material was created on 1979-02-02.