Erupt in a sentence as a verb

The entire auditorium would erupt in cheers at the end of the match for the winner.

I think if Twitter was forced to shut down, a PR shitstorm of amazing proportions would erupt.

If you don't have data you're just speculating, and by data I don't mean "yeah, volcanoes erupt and emit stuff".

At the time, and I speak as someone who was living through it, there was a real fear that the country would erupt into a civil war.

Every year, like clockwork, it causes me to erupt volcanically.

That's the second time in recent memory that I got chills watching a room full of really smart people erupt into applause.

The bubble will have to pop. When the China housing bubble pops, China's whole national economy will be severely stressed, and political instability may erupt.

But it looks most plausible to me that software life will erupt from our culture in much the same way as we erupted from Greek tribes thousands of years ago - but much more rapidly.

When you put thousands or tens of thousands of people in a protest, depending on how outraged they are against the government, it might erupt into a violent revolution.

Their presence tends to erupt as a tangent or non-sequitur to another discussion, destroying the overall thread in a wave of verbose hysteria.

Hence, I don't believe that simply taking pristine care of the teeth will magically help--if they don't erupt from the gums properly or come in crooked, there isn't much else that can be done save an extraction if they're problematic.

Mostly because there aren't really any left, and those who still hang around don't regularly erupt in violence, but also because they're much more like us and it's easier for us to understand their particular extremism.

>As financial, economic, and political crises of all kinds continue to erupt >all over the planet from time to time, demand for Bitcoin as a currency or >store of value of last resort should gradually expand from niche markets to >the broader population.

According to TFA, "The next pandemic will erupt, not from the jungle, but from the disease factories of hospitals, refugee camps and cities"The problem, as I see it, is that we have entire swaths of cities in Monrovia, Liberia being sealed off and turned into disease reservoirs [1].

Another form...in which boils erupt under the armpits,...a third form in which people of both sexes are attacked in the groin....And this form is the most dangerous of all these terrible things, which is to say that it is the most contagious, for when one infected person dies everyone who saw him during his illness, visited him, had any dealings with him, or carried him to burial, immediately follows him, without any remedy.

Erupt definitions

verb

start abruptly; "After 1989, peace broke out in the former East Bloc"

verb

erupt or intensify suddenly; "Unrest erupted in the country"; "Tempers flared at the meeting"; "The crowd irrupted into a burst of patriotism"

See also: irrupt flare

verb

start to burn or burst into flames; "Marsh gases ignited suddenly"; "The oily rags combusted spontaneously"

See also: ignite combust conflagrate

verb

break out; "The tooth erupted and had to be extracted"

verb

become active and spew forth lava and rocks; "Vesuvius erupts once in a while"

See also: belch extravasate

verb

force out or release suddenly and often violently something pent up; "break into tears"; "erupt in anger"

See also: break burst

verb

appear on the skin; "A rash erupted on her arms after she had touched the exotic plant"

verb

become raw or open; "He broke out in hives"; "My skin breaks out when I eat strawberries"; "Such boils tend to recrudesce"

See also: recrudesce