The volcano last erupted 25 years ago.
after months of tension the roommates' living situation was a volcano
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The options for hiking in North County include everything from lagoons to canyons and even the remains of a volcano.—Maura Fox, San Diego Union-Tribune, 25 Dec. 2025 The Warriors have spent half a decade waiting for the breakout, treating his athleticism like a dormant volcano.—Dieter Kurtenbach, Mercury News, 24 Dec. 2025 Construction workers were building domestic rooms, a bakery with ovens, grain-washing basins and storage facilities when the volcano erupted.—Andrea Margolis, FOXNews.com, 23 Dec. 2025 She’s been reacting to her environment since the trauma of the volcano.—David Canfield, HollywoodReporter, 22 Dec. 2025 See All Example Sentences for volcano
Word History
Etymology
Italian or Spanish; Italian vulcano, from Spanish volcán, ultimately from Latin Volcanus Vulcan
: a vent in the earth's crust from which melted or hot rock and steam come out
also: a hill or mountain composed entirely or in part of the material thrown out
Etymology
from Italian or Spanish; Italian vulcano "volcano," from Spanish vulcán, from Latin Volcanus, Vulcanus "Vulcan (Roman god of fire)"
Word Origin
The ancient Greeks and Romans had many gods and goddesses. Each of these deities was in charge of a special kind of work or an aspect of nature. Many of the happenings in nature were explained in myth as the actions of one or more of these gods or goddesses. The Roman god of fire was known as Vulcanus in Latin (Vulcan in English). He was thought to live inside Mount Etna, a volcano on the island of Sicily. Vulcan was a giant who worked as a blacksmith, forging the thunderbolts for Jupiter, king of the gods. The smoke and occasional fiery rocks and lava that came from Mount Etna were thought to be from Vulcan's forge. That is how his name came to be applied to a mountain that sometimes spews forth fire and smoke.
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