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> Did you know Vocab Vitamins Complete is just $16.50/year? > Subscribe > Account Settings To UNSUBSCRIBE, click here and follow the instructions on our simple form. Fire Escape Partners 3465 25th Street, Suite 17 San Francisco, CA 94110 | (intransitive verb, transitive verb, noun) [FUL-mah-nayt'] 1. to issue forth thunderous censures, denunciations or attacks: "The activist burst into the conference room and fulminated at the shocked corporate panel before being removed from the building by a security guard."
2. to explode or detonate with a loud, sudden noise
transitive verb
3. to issue forth something thunderously or vehemently
4. to cause to explode or detonate
noun
5. an explosive salt of fulminic acid, or a compound derived from such a substance, especially fulminate of mercury
other noun forms: fulmination, fulminator adjective form: fulminatory Origin: Approximately 1400; from Middle English, 'fulminaten': to discharge a formal condemnation; possibly an influence of Old French, 'fulminer'; from Latin, 'fulminatus': thundered, past participle of 'fulminare': to hurl lightning, from 'fulmen': lightning (genitive 'fulminis'), related to 'fulgere': to shine. In action: "Many words have been applied to Japanese novelist Banana Yoshimoto. Conventional is not one of them. For a start, there's the name. She says she chose it because it was cute. And then there's her first novel, 'Kitchen', which she wrote when she was 24. It tells the story of a lonely young woman who moves her bed into the kitchen, partly because she finds comfort in the humming of the fridge. 'Kitchen' was a huge and immediate success. It established the young Yoshimoto as Japan's Generation X writer - the voice of alienated youth.
Now 31, and with 10 novels and seven essays to her credit, Yoshimoto is a controversial figure in Japanese literary circles. The old guard fulminate. They say her stories lack depth and fail to reflect the glory of Japan's literary tradition. Her admirers say they don't care. For them, Yoshimoto's simple style articulates the frustrations of being young and unfocused in a materialistically rich world."
"Asia's Most Powerful Women," Asia Week.com (September 15, 1999).
"I confess that I do not see what good it does to fulminate against the English tyranny while the Roman tyranny occupies the palace of the soul."
James Joyce (1882�1941). Irish author. Lecture (April 27, 1907).
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