Vapor in a sentence as a noun

He met his God and saw vapor. The sad thing is that he's still better off than any of us.

Did you know that some stenches can be so intense that they actually have wet vapor and can sting your eyes? I didn't know until that day.

Guy puffed it like he was in a noir film, blew the vapor all over the place. They most definitely have a smell, and I'd often end up stinking of it when I got home from work.

Just the same way you can make a face or a zoo animal from a pattern of water vapor in the sky, you're making a failure out of a pattern of events in the past. In both cases, it's illusion.

It's known that Mars has both ice and water vapor, and that further, summertime temperatures are warm enough to sustain liquid water. It's the atmosphere that makes this a bit surprising.

The major component of the secondhand vapor would be glycerin and/or propylene glycol. In extreme cases you might inhale entire milligrams of the stuff.

Molten salts have very little vapor pressure, and therefore don't volatilize as readily. 3.

I think this thread demonstrates why the privacy issues with the likes of google, facebook, etc are pretty much vapor complaints. Essentially, people are happy in the end to sacrifice privacy for convenience.

You would probably take in more nicotine from eating a meal of ******** than you would get from secondhand vapor. You wouldn't get enough from secondhand vapor to have psychoactive effects, let alone come anywhere near toxicity.

I'm trying to accept the silly/weird premise in good humor, but I still don't "get" why the figurative humanish black hole is defensive about converting water vapor to energy. Maybe there's an obscure sci-fi or Seinfeld reference I'm missing.

That "narrow bridge of familiarity" was easy to cross back over, especially when I ran out of vapor cartridges. Ultimately for me to quit it took stopping cigarettes cold-turkey.

The products of hydrolysis are mainly hydrofluoric acid and hydrochloric acid, usually released as steam or vapor due to the highly exothermic nature of the reaction." HF scares the willies out of me, and this stuff burns you and then turns into HF. Lovely!"

For example, they mentioned they don't want the rocket to fly through clouds because of water vapor. Why is that? How does it interfere with the rocket? What can it cause? How confidently can we measure water vapor in atmosphere?

Tucson, Arizona uses sodium vapor lighting for all its street lighting specifically to allow the nearby observatories easily filter the light pollution.

The bang comes from the plastic bottle popping from the H2 released, and the H2 recondensing with atmospheric O2 back into H2O which is the source of the "smoke" seen in videos, which is just water vapor. Those who are talking about "explosions", "bombs", "IEDs", and "incendiary devices" at the police department, and on this and other boards, are exceptionally scientifically ignorant and are not qualified at all to comment on any of this.

Furthermore H20 has multiple effects - in the form of vapor it is a great greenhouse gas, in the form of clouds it is a great reflector of light, as it precipitates, it removes other things that can cause global warming, if it precipitates as snow, it causes cooling, etc. In any detailed modeling of climate, it is very important and difficult to get the impacts of H20 right.

Vapor definitions

noun

a visible suspension in the air of particles of some substance

See also: vapour

noun

the process of becoming a vapor

See also: vaporization vaporisation vapour evaporation