A Phoenix
The Phoenix can rise from its own ashes.
Throw water on it. The logical answer.
He bursts into flames and dies, then is reborn from the ashes.
Your car bursts into flames and tries to kill you with a spoon
I believe that you think to alkali metals (ex. sodium).
A Phoenix is a bird that bursts into flames when it gets old. Out of the ashes it is reborn as a Phoenix chicken.
it breaks either fizzles out and burns, bursts into flames or goes BANG!
Yes they can but the Grip paper might not have the sandpaper feel to it
It is the temperature at which paper, in this case books, spontaneously combusts (bursts into flames). 451 degrees Fahrenheit.
A soft, light weight metal called sodium, which we never see. It bursts into flames in air and can even burn under water.
roll / rolls / rolling The balls roll along a channel The car rolls down the road, hits the bus and bursts into flames. Are we rolling?
That phenomenon is known as a reactive metal-water reaction. Certain metals, such as sodium and potassium, react violently with water, producing heat and hydrogen gas that can ignite. This reaction is highly exothermic and can lead to the metal bursting into flames.