Skyrocket in a sentence as a noun

When it sinks in that we're going to run out of oil, why wouldn't prices skyrocket?

Capitol Hill has been seeing rents skyrocket in the past few years.

Their value is bound to skyrocket in the future as more and more people get into it.

The alcohol content in the stomach would skyrocket even if it were low in the drink.

Costs could in fact skyrocket: each part would have its own contract, negotiation process, meetings, forms, etc.

If people and other sites like you and link back to you your traffic will quickly skyrocketwhich feels natural.

Skyrocket in a sentence as a verb

This is only the beginning of the eurocrisis and it shall get uglier by the day. Unemployment is going to skyrocket.

Exxon didn't want XTO's share price to skyrocket on rumors of an acquisition as it could've made the deal unprofitable.

The NYT is furious about it, because they are not envisioning the possible future headline "Women and poor worst hit as consumer good prices skyrocket due to aluminum shortage.

This would make the R0 of the disease skyrocket up into something that could quickly overwhelm Western medicine and very rapidly turn into something perhaps even more devastating than the plague.

And Obama admitted the effect, that electric rates would "skyrocket".But eventually I understood that I had gotten all excited over next to nothing: Yes, apparently some old coal fired plants have been shut down -- a good report would be of interest but I don't have a reference to one.

Skyrocket definitions

noun

propels bright light high in the sky, or used to propel a lifesaving line or harpoon

See also: rocket

noun

sends a firework display high into the sky

See also: rocket

verb

shoot up abruptly, like a rocket; "prices skyrocketed"

See also: rocket