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blaze
1[ bleyz ]
noun
- a bright flame or fire:
the welcome blaze of the hearth.
- a bright, hot gleam or glow:
the blaze of day.
- a sparkling brightness:
a blaze of jewels.
- a sudden, intense outburst, as of fire, passion, or fury:
to unleash a blaze of pent-up emotions; a blaze of glory.
- blazes, Informal. hell:
Go to blazes!
verb (used without object)
- to burn brightly (sometimes followed by away, up, forth ):
The bonfire blazed away for hours. The dry wood blazed up at the touch of a match.
- to shine like flame (sometimes followed by forth ):
Their faces blazed with enthusiasm.
- to burn with intense feeling or passion (sometimes followed by up ):
He blazed up at the insult.
- to shoot steadily or continuously (usually followed by away ):
The contestants blazed away at the clay pigeons.
- to be brilliantly conspicuous.
blaze
2[ bleyz ]
noun
- a spot or mark made on a tree, as by painting or notching or by chipping away a piece of the bark, to indicate a trail or boundary.
- a white area down the center of the face of a horse, cow, etc.
verb (used with object)
- to mark with blazes:
to blaze a trail.
- to lead in forming or finding (a new method, course, etc.):
His research in rocketry blazed the way for space travel.
blaze
1/ bleɪz /
noun
- a strong fire or flame
- a very bright light or glare
- an outburst (of passion, acclaim, patriotism, etc)
- brilliance; brightness
verb
- to burn fiercely
- to shine brightly
- often foll by up to become stirred, as with anger or excitement
- usually foll by away to shoot continuously
blaze
2/ bleɪz /
noun
- a mark, usually indicating a path, made on a tree, esp by chipping off the bark
- a light-coloured marking on the face of a domestic animal, esp a horse
verb
- to indicate or mark (a tree, path, etc) with a blaze
- blaze a trailto explore new territories, areas of knowledge, etc, in such a way that others can follow
blaze
3/ bleɪz /
verb
- troften foll byabroad to make widely known; proclaim
Word History and Origins
Origin of blaze1
Origin of blaze2
Word History and Origins
Origin of blaze1
Origin of blaze2
Origin of blaze3
Idioms and Phrases
In addition to the idiom beginning with blaze , also see hot as blazes ; like greased lightning (blazes) .Synonym Study
Example Sentences
On Christmas Day, sometime after dark, a hideous fire overtook the venue: 100 firefighters, 33 fire trucks, a four-alarm blaze.
A Molotov cocktail tumbled in an arc overhead and erupted briefly in a blaze.
The blaze was deemed suspicious enough to warrant an investigation.
They began assisting whomever they could and made plans to fight this blaze on high.
Pasto is almost 8,300 feet up in the mountains, so it was cold and crisp, with a blaze of stars across the sky.
She got up and stood in front of the fire, having her hand on the chimney-piece and looking down at the blaze.
She waited for the material pictures which she thought would gather and blaze before her imagination.
Through these flues were forced currents of hot air from a blaze in a large fireplace at one end of the house.
Hard up as we are for shell he thinks it best to blaze it away freely before closing and to trust our bayonets when we get in.
There was a fire burning in the general-room of the hostelry, and Garnache went to warm him at its cheerful blaze.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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