US /bɚst/
・UK /bɜ:st/
But if your lungs are filled with too much air, they could burst as a shock wave rips through your body.
Breathing in small intervals will keep the pressure in your lungs low, making them less likely to burst.
But Clock would always wait out in the hall until that bell rang and he'd burst through the door every morning like this.
10 minutes later, he burst through that door.
They multiply, generating thousands of themselves, and then burst out of the cells.
They now violently attack red blood cells, multiplying inside them until they burst, then finding more red blood cells,
This is the Civil War premiere." And he burst out into tears.
AND HE BURST INTO TEARS.
The amount of air pressure from this could burst your lungs, or, alternatively, create an embolism that travels to your heart.
millions of years into the future like gamma-ray burst
And so as I kept my head down to protect my face from the wind, my bitter bubble was burst by the voice of a woman from a few meters ahead who was making child-like noises like, "Whoo and shoo."
A manufacturing defect caused the batteries to overheat and burst into flames.
Name, shame, blame tryna burst my bubble.
Some people burst into tears when they see my work, you know, and that brings it home to me what I've done.