Blasting Agents Orange signs warning about the presence of highly explosive and dangerous explosive material |
Explosives Orange and black signs warning about something (or someone) that has the potential to blow up |
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Spontaneously Combustible Red and black sign that warns that something is likely to catch fire and, even better, for no particular reason |
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Oxygen This hazardous material is really important to the whole breathing process, but when it comes in truck form, you probably should not light a match |
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Gasoline Hazardous because its explodes and burns easily and because it makes the country dependent on corrupt foreign nations and domestic oil companies |
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Inhalation Hazard Yes, you can inhale everything from perfume to food, but that does not make it a good idea |
Fuel Oil While it does not burn as easily as gasoline, it has may of the same long term effects, especially the threat to the future of our way of life |
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Flammable Solid The stripes make it a little hard to read, but you'll have plenty of time to figure it out in the burn unit, if you're lucky |
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Dangerous Perhaps the most succinct hazmat sign of them all, and the stripe makes it one of the most stylish, too |
Corrosive Probably not a sign you'd want to see on a bottle of something you're putting into a cocktail, unless of course it's of the Molotov variety |
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Combustible A red sign with a flame graphic doesn't really need a four-syllable word to get the point across |