meltdowns

plural of meltdown

Example Sentences

Recent Examples of Synonyms for meltdowns
Noun
  • Heroes protect people and society from accidents, disasters, and villains—criminals who use their Quirks for evil.
    Kevin Sabet, Newsweek, 24 Mar. 2025
  • Severe weather disasters that result in damage of at least $1 billion now average 23 per year and have doubled since the 2010s, according to Bank of America.
    Spencer Kimball, CNBC, 24 Mar. 2025
Noun
  • The Leafs had far too many defensive breakdowns in the first, and ran into penalty trouble in the second, but the game was still tied at 1-1 heading into the third.
    Kevin Papetti, The Athletic, 2 Jan. 2025
  • The move ends, or brings to the next phase, one of the longest-running and most public marital breakdowns in modern Hollywood history.
    Max Goldbart, Deadline, 31 Dec. 2024
Noun
  • Like the tragedy of the recent California wildfires as well as so many other calamities of our time, each one impacts us all to one degree or another.
    Michael B. Teiger, Hartford Courant, 31 Jan. 2025
  • Everyone in the audience laughed when the capybara first appeared onscreen, even the little kid behind us who had cried earlier, scared of some of the calamities befalling the feline hero.
    Gary Shteyngart, The New Yorker, 27 Jan. 2025
Noun
  • Those cuts have been felt in the meager US response to the Myanmar quake, according to experts, exposing a void in international relief measures for major catastrophes.
    Rebecca Wright, CNN Money, 10 Apr. 2025
  • The ongoing civil war has caused one of the world’s worst humanitarian catastrophes and diplomatic efforts to bring the conflict to an end have failed.
    Nadeen Ebrahim, CNN Money, 10 Apr. 2025
Noun
  • Violence was entrenched as a byproduct of a government that ignored the tragedies faced by those like Shirley Vasquez and her neighbors.
    Cary Goodman, New York Daily News, 5 Jan. 2025
  • An Interview with Diane Wilson Sarah Neilson Talking to the author of The Seed Keeper about the tragedies of modern agriculture, and restoring Indigenous foods to communities as one way of healing historical trauma.
    Max Ufberg, hazlitt.net, 4 Jan. 2025
Noun
  • Widespread abuse can lead to sudden cardiac arrest, convulsions, strokes and death.
    Ingrid Vasquez, People.com, 28 Dec. 2024
  • Exposure to larger doses of the gas can cause loss of consciousness, cardiac arrest, possibly leading to death, coma, convulsions, paralysis, respiratory failure, and seizures.
    Andy Biggs, Newsweek, 25 Dec. 2024
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Cite this Entry

“Meltdowns.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/meltdowns. Accessed 22 Apr. 2025.

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