0 present participle of blast --
1 to explode or destroy something or someone with explosives, or to break through or hit something with a similar, very strong force: --
2 to make a very loud and unpleasant noise: --
3 to criticize someone or something severely: --
The administration was blasted for failing to create jobs.
The question to be addressed by this study is whether the "blasting out" process generalizes and extends to relationships outside of the family and beyond adolescence.
Many of these points are the expected consequences of having a massive planet blow up nearby, thereby blasting the facing hemisphere and leaving the shielded hemisphere relatively unscathed.
It is thus reasonable to assume that lightning can possess sufficient energy to produce the degree of blasting and shattering of the extent observed at the first lightning impact site.
Subsequent versions of the vision system will master the blasting operation by calculating the robot trajectory; they will also test resulting blasting quality.
This system is composed of three primary parts: the blasting head (injection unit), the aspiration unit and the cleaning head.
Most jurisdictions impose strict liability for certain dangerous activities, such as blasting, or keeping wild animals.
The explosive scientists and engineers played a big role in the underwater blasting and construction work.
The blasting has a triangular surface outline 1 x 1 x 1.5 m in size and is 1 m deep.