13 |
doom
|
nounverb verb
|
Condemn to certain destruction or death |
See
|
14 |
doom
|
nounverb noun
|
Death, destruction, or some other terrible fate |
See
|
15 |
doomsday
|
noun
|
The end of the world, or a time when something very bad will happen, such as great destruction. |
See
|
16 |
erupt
|
verb
|
To explode suddenly after forces can't be held back any longer |
See
|
17 |
fatal
|
adjective
|
Something that can cause death. |
See
|
18 |
fester
|
verb
|
For negative feelings to get worse because they are not being dealt with |
See
|
19 |
flammable
|
adjective
|
Easily set on fire; capable of catching fire quickly. |
See
|
20 |
heresy
|
noun
|
An opinion or belief that contradicts established norms or accepted standards. |
See
|
21 |
hysteria
|
noun
|
A state of extreme excitement, fear or anger in which a person, or a group of people, loses control of their emotions and starts to cry, laugh, etc. |
See
|
22 |
incendiary
|
adjective
|
Likely to cause fire, violence, strong feelings, or anger. |
See
|
23 |
inferno
|
noun
|
A large fire that is dangerously out of control |
See
|
24 |
jeopardize
|
verb
|
To endanger or threaten the success or safety of something. |
See
|
25 |
liability
|
noun
|
Being legally responsible for something |
See
|
26 |
loom
|
verb
|
To appear as a dangerous event that might happen in the near future
|
See
|
27 |
lurk
|
verb
|
(of a person or animal) To be hidden so as to wait in ambush for someone or something |
See
|
28 |
malady
|
noun
|
A disease or ailment |
See
|
29 |
malignant
|
adjective
|
Dangerous and harmful, tending to produce death or deterioration – often describing something destructive or uncontrollably harmful. |
See
|
30 |
meltdown
|
noun
|
A sudden and complete failure, especially in a system or process |
See
|
31 |
monstrous
|
adjective
|
Abnormally bad or shocking |
See
|
32 |
nosedive
|
noun
|
A sudden, steep drop, a sharp decline in condition, success, or stability. |
See
|