(Askeri) NAPALM: 1. Alev püskürtücüler veya yangın bombalarında kullanılmak üzere benzini koyulaştırmak için faydalanılan kimyasal bir madde. 2. Jelatinleştirilmiş özün bileşkesi
A highly flammable, viscous substance, (designed to stick to the body while burning), used in warfare to cause widespread death and destruction, especially in wooded areas
Incendiary, such as gelled gasoline, used in Vietnam by the French and the Americans using flame throwers and dropping in bombs from aircraft to serves as a defoliant and as an antipersonnel weapon
If people napalm other people or places, they attack and burn them using napalm. Why napalm a village now?. a substance made from petrol that was used in bombs by US forces to burn fields and villages during the Vietnam war (naphthene a chemical compound (19-21 centuries) (from naphtha) + palmitate a chemical substance (19-21 centuries) (from palme )). Organic compound, the aluminum soap or salt of a mixture of fatty acids, used to thicken gasoline for use as an incendiary in flamethrowers and firebombs. The thickened mixture, itself also called napalm, burns more slowly and can be propelled more accurately and over greater distances than gasoline. When it comes in contact with surfaces, including the human body, it sticks tenaciously and continues to burn. It was developed and first used by the U.S. in World War II. Its use in the Vietnam War became highly controversial
Napalm is a powdered aluminum soap or similar compound used to gelatinize oil or gasoline for use in napalm bombs or flame throwers, or the resultant gelatinized substance [53]
Jellied gasoline, dropped from attack jets, incinerated anything it hit, produced horrific burns in survivors
gasoline jelled with aluminum soaps; highly incendiary liquid used in fire bombs and flame throwers
Napalm is a substance containing petrol which is used to make bombs that burn people, buildings, and plants. The government has consistently denied using napalm