| 释义 | 
		Definition of firesetter in English: firesetternoun ˈfʌɪəsɛtə An arsonist.  Example sentencesExamples -  Many fire professionals believe that fire-safety education can reduce the recidivism rate among juvenile firesetters.
 -  Thrillseeker arsonists are those archetypal fire-setter figures who stay around in the crowd to watch what happens.
 -  In Kent, as in similar schemes elsewhere, advisers encourage young fire-setters to talk, to open up.
 -  Juvenile firesetters also have been found to view themselves as loners.
 -  The firesetter dwells on his invulnerability and justifications even after the fire is over.
 -  He is improving assessment tools that identify fire-setters as well as developing information packets.
 -  Firesetters often strive to cover their tracks, but the specialist police dog will make life very difficult for them in future.
 -  Many firesetters have poor academic achievements, which is more related to a generalised set of behaviour problems.
 -  If a child is identified as a pathological fire-setter, he or she receives free behavioral health-care treatment.
 -  A firesetter may have multiple motives.
 -  The family environment of the childhood firesetter is likely to be chaotic.
 -  Mental health professionals are accustomed to working independently, but it is imperative that a relationship be maintained with the fire and police departments when treating juvenile firesetters.
 -  Throughout the country, fire and rescue services run proactive educational schemes about fire and its dangers, as well as programmes in which individual fire-setters are dealt with on a one-to-one basis.
 -  Firesetters experience significantly more emotional neglect and physical abuse than do other children of similar socioeconomic and geographic backgrounds.
 -  Some severely disturbed firesetters engage in self-harm.
 -  The young fire-setters are asked why and how often they lit fires and what they thought they were going to get out of it.
 -  Research has indicated that firesetters tend to exhibit conduct problems, such as disobedience and aggressiveness.
 -  Children who are deemed curiosity fire-setters tend to have a single incident of fire-play and often require just fire-safety education.
 -  To gauge whether a fire-setter's behavior is pathological, environmental or, more simply, derived from curiosity, firefighters often use psychologist-developed assessment questionnaires.
 -  The number of adolescent firesetters has been growing each year, along with the psychological and financial damage they create.
 
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