Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
"Do you feel that gas is more ignitable than charcoal?"
It is ignitable when in a mixture of 13 percent or less by volume with air.
Ignitable liquids can leave behind irregular patterns on the surface of a floor.
The properties of some ignitable liquids make them dangerous fuels.
If the vessel contents are ignitable, this event may result in a "fireball".
Ignitable liquids can leave behind tell-tale marks in the fire debris.
These irregular burn patterns can indicate the presence of an ignitable liquid in a fire.
The flash point of a liquid fuel is the lowest temperature at which it can form an ignitable mix with air.
In some cases the gas, ignitable vapor or dust is present all the time or for long periods.
Investigators reported finding a small propane torch and a mixture of ignitable chemicals at the fire scene.
It is ignitable with a burning match.
It is common for the words fire accelerant and ignitable liquid to be used synonymously.
The oven's instruction manual warned that the oven should not be used for "anything that is easily ignitable."
A full tank of cold fuel would produce fewer ignitable vapors at and shortly after the takeoff.
No longer was there danger of seething, ignitable surgency.
Ignitable liquids are not always fire accelerants, they may just be present at the scene under normal circumstances.
These acclerants are also known as ignitable liquids.
Arsonists who use large amounts of available combustible material rather than ignitable liquids try to avoid detection.
Post-flashover burning can create damage on a floor that looks very much like an ignitable liquid had burned there.
The flash-point is the temperature at which the material will generate sufficient quantity of vapor to form an ignitable mixture.
Relatively low amounts of ignitable material."
If I was right, it would explain why he didn't detect the odor of ignitable liquids at either of our fire scenes.
Ignitable wastes are defined by their combustion capacity under conditions when they consist of waste oils and solvents.
American manufacturers must safely dispose of nearly 250 million tons of toxic, corrosive, ignitable or explosive wastes each year.
The roof in the Chernobyl Power Plant complex was made of bitumen - against design - rendering it ignitable.