| 手榴弹 | shǒu liú dàn | hand grenade | |
| 榴弹 | liú dàn | high explosive shell; grenade | |
| 榴莲 | liú lián | durian fruit; Durio zibethinus | |
| 榴弹炮 | liú dàn pào | howitzer | |
| 枪榴弹 | qiāng liú dàn | rifle grenade |
| 1 | The fourth photographer, Michael Christopher Brown, suffered shrapnel wounds to his left shoulder, but his life was not in danger. | |
| 2 | Nearing the earth's surface the pressure in the mantle becomes too weak to maintain the majorite, which then decomposes. | |
| 3 | What's left at this stage, they say, is something akin to crash management - keeping the shrapnel from hitting too many corporate assets and bystanders. | |
| 4 | As Professor Dr. Christian Ballhaus from the Mineralogical Institute at the Bonn University explains, "The higher the pressure, the more oxygen can be stored by majorite.". | |
| 5 | The president has had two hours of surgery at the Royal Darwin Hospital to repair damage to a lung and to remove bullet fragments and shrapnel from his chest. |