Sentences with phrase «piece of shrapnel»

North Africa, where he it and caught a piece of shrapnel.
Furthermore, I apologize to all the crew and cast for any negative attention Lethal Weapon is receiving because of these incidents,» he said in a statement after an actor felt unsafe on the set after being hit by a piece of shrapnel.
Collagen is critical for all kinds of wounds, whether a bullet wound, a piece of shrapnel or a papercut.
The dinosaurs» fate may have been sealed by a piece of shrapnel from a cosmic collision that occurred long before the asteroid smashed into the Yucatán Peninsula 65 million years ago.
A woman aboard a Southwest flight was nearly sucked out of the plane after a piece of shrapnel from an exploded engine broke off and shattered her window before the aircraft was forced to make an emergency landing in Philadelphia.
When someone throws a hand grenade, it's impossible to know where every single piece of shrapnel will fall.
I took away with me a piece of shrapnel from a mortar shell that had killed a four - year - old girl just two weeks before.
One bystander who had been rushed into the tent had a deep, three - inch - wide gash in his leg with a piece of shrapnel sticking out of it.
Should it explode, however, four pieces of shrapnel will get flung in diagonal directions, damaging the Kongs and even enemies upon impact with them.
From explosions you can trace the individual pieces of shrapnel entering the body, watching the bones break, flesh and ligaments tear.
If a Takata airbag inflates too rapidly, the metal canister housing the airbag inflator may explode and send deadly pieces of shrapnel into the faces and chests of vehicle occupants.
She was struck in the toe and upper arm by flying pieces of shrapnel.

Not exact matches

The vast bulk of asteroids — millions of individual objects ranging from 560 - mile - wide Ceres to pea - size pieces of space shrapnel — reside in a broad zone between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, the legendary asteroid belt.
A further blow came in 1929 when American astronomer Edwin Hubble observed that galaxies were flying apart from each other like pieces of cosmic shrapnel.
Shrapnel disbursed by the bombs included pieces of metal, nails and ball bearings.
Debris from shattered homes can be the most devastating aspect of a storm, sending a cloud of shrapnel - like pieces of scrap metal and wood flying at hundreds of miles an hour into house after house.
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