Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Alternative spelling of
fireproof .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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Looking at this again, I really want to know if it is really fire-proof.
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The cross erected earlier this month is a fire-proof replacement of the second cross, which was also made of wood like the original one destroyed by the fire.
Chris Rodda: The Camp Pendleton Cross: The Facts vs. What the "Persecuted" Christians Are Saying Chris Rodda 2011
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Inside the bunker itself, fire-proof and dust-proof floors and walls were installed to further protect the manuscripts.
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Inside the building things got so bad, Mayor Michael Bloomberg forbid New York schoolchildren to visit the United Nations two years ago unless new sprinkler systems and fire-proof doors were installed, many of which took place, costing millions.
Evelyn Leopold: UN Renovation: Fun Taken Out of East River Complex 2010
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Bob Hope has amassed an 85,000-page joke file, digitally scanned and broken down into categories, which he stores in file cabinets in a theft - and fire-proof walk-in vault in the office next to his North Hollywood home, 2002. 100
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Maybe a flaming moat, filled with fire-proof crocodiles.
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Bob Hope has amassed an 85,000-page joke file, digitally scanned and broken down into categories, which he stores in file cabinets in a theft - and fire-proof walk-in vault in the office next to his North Hollywood home, 2002. 100
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Inside the building things got so bad, Mayor Michael Bloomberg forbid New York schoolchildren to visit the United Nations two years ago unless new sprinkler systems and fire-proof doors were installed, many of which took place, costing millions.
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Bob Hope has amassed an 85,000-page joke file, digitally scanned and broken down into categories, which he stores in file cabinets in a theft - and fire-proof walk-in vault in the office next to his North Hollywood home, 2002. 100
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She's appeared in what seems like innumerable ads and on TV shows, magazine covers and websites, but like most race car drivers used in advertising, she's almost always wearing her head-to-toe and very baggy Nomex fire-proof driving suit.
Steve Parker: IndyCar's Danica Patrick on cover of June's Shape Magazine 2009
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