The word dynamite is a noun and a verb which is sometimes used as an adjective in informal language. Example uses:
Noun: We keep the dynamite is a separate concrete bunker for safety.
Verb: They had to dynamite the rock to put a road through.
Adjective (informal): That new restaurant has a dynamitebuffet.
My FFA Chapter is trying to get an award for our teacher. We have to make a video to submit and our theme is Napoleon Dynamite. We are going to have posters in the back and that is what I am making. I need some ideas for the posters. We were thinking a adjective per poster!
Dynamite would rhyme with it.
No, because dynamiteisnot a propernoun.
The root word of the word "dynamite" is "dynamo." "Dynamo" is derived from the Greek word "dunamis," which means power or strength. In the context of explosives, "dynamite" refers to a powerful explosive material invented by Alfred Nobel in the 19th century.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
As a noun, there are no antonyms for the word dynamite. As an adjective, some antonyms for dynamite are dull or uninteresting.
My FFA Chapter is trying to get an award for our teacher. We have to make a video to submit and our theme is Napoleon Dynamite. We are going to have posters in the back and that is what I am making. I need some ideas for the posters. We were thinking a adjective per poster!
yes you do use dynamite
-The dynamite exploded in the building -Dynamite is very dangerous. -Dynamite is used in war.
George Letrell Dynamite goes by Dynamite.
Miss dynamite is a rapper, most acclaimed for her release 'miss dynamite'.
You put the dynamite by the rocks after you have a line of gas by the rocks. Then you push the dynamite toward the rock and you turn on the elevator. After that your dynamite blows up the rocks.
The correct spelling is 'dynamite'.
Dynamite was not known in 1800.
The principal component of dynamite is nitroglycerin.
Yes, it is true that dynamite that is unfused near a fuesed dynamite stick can "explode" due to the combustion of the other stick of dynamite "going off:. Yes, it is true that dynamite that is unfused near a fuesed dynamite stick can "explode" due to the combustion of the other stick of dynamite "going off:.
Dynamite was invented by Alfred Nobel