Fire

  

Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.

Fire

Definition: Fire

Fire

Noun

1. The event of something burning (often destructive); "they lost everything in the fire".

2. The process of combustion of inflammable materials producing heat and light and (often) smoke; "fire was one of our ancestors' first discoveries".

3. The act of firing weapons or artillery at an enemy; "hold your fire until you can see the whites of their eyes"; "they retreated in the face of withering enemy fire".

4. A fireplace in which a fire is burning; "they sat by the fire and talked".

5. Intense adverse criticism; "Clinton directed his fire at the Republican Party"; "the government has come under attack"; "don't give me any flak".

6. Feelings of great warmth and intensity; "he spoke with great ardor".

7. (archaic) once thought to be one of four elements composing the universe (Empedocles).

8. A severe trial; "he went through fire and damnation".

Verb

1. Start firing a weapon.

2. Cause to go off; "fire a gun"; "fire a bullet".

3. Bake in a kiln; "fire pottery".

4. Terminate the employment of; "The boss fired his secretary today".

5. Go off or discharge; "The gun fired".

6. Drive out or away by or as if by fire; "The soldiers were fired"; "Surrender fires the cold skepticism".

7. Call forth; of emotions, feelings, and responses; "arouse pity"; "raise a smile"; "evoke sympathy".

8. Destroy by fire; "They burned the house and his diaries".

9. Provide with fuel; "Oil fires the furnace".

Source: WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
 

Date "fire" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1010. (references)

 

Specialty Definition: Fire

DomainDefinition

Aerospace

1. To ignite a rocket engine. Usage is sometimes restricted to period of main chamber burning when small igniter chambers are used, especially with igniter idle provisions where the igniter may burn for some significant period prior to main chamber fire.2. To launch a rocket. (references)

Bible

Fire (1.) For sacred purposes. The sacrifices were consumed by fire (Gen. 8:20). The ever-burning fire on the altar was first kindled from heaven (Lev. 6:9, 13; 9:24), and afterwards rekindled at the dedication of Solomon's temple (2 Chr. 7:1, 3). The expressions "fire from heaven" and "fire of the Lord" generally denote lightning, but sometimes also the fire of the altar was so called (Ex. 29:18; Lev. 1:9; 2:3; 3:5, 9). Fire for a sacred purpose obtained otherwise than from the altar was called "strange fire" (Lev. 10:1, 2; Num. 3:4). The victims slain for sin offerings were afterwards consumed by fire outside the camp (Lev. 4:12, 21; 6:30; 16:27; Heb. 13:11). (2.) For domestic purposes, such as baking, cooking, warmth, etc. (Jer. 36:22; Mark 14:54; John 18:18). But on Sabbath no fire for any domestic purpose was to be kindled (Ex. 35:3; Num. 15:32-36). (3.) Punishment of death by fire was inflicted on such as were guilty of certain forms of unchastity and incest (Lev. 20:14; 21:9). The burning of captives in war was not unknown among the Jews (2 Sam. 12:31; Jer. 29:22). The bodies of infamous persons who were executed were also sometimes burned (Josh. 7:25; 2 Kings 23:16). (4.) In war, fire was used in the destruction of cities, as Jericho (Josh. 6:24), Ai (8:19), Hazor (11:11), Laish (Judg. 18:27), etc. The war-chariots of the Canaanites were burnt (Josh. 11:6, 9, 13). The Israelites burned the images (2 Kings 10:26; R.V., "pillars") of the house of Baal. These objects of worship seem to have been of the nature of obelisks, and were sometimes evidently made of wood. Torches were sometimes carried by the soldiers in battle (Judg. 7:16). (5.) Figuratively, fire is a symbol of Jehovah's presence and the instrument of his power (Ex. 14:19; Num. 11:1, 3; Judg. 13:20; 1 Kings 18:38; 2 Kings 1:10, 12; 2:11; Isa. 6:4; Ezek. 1:4; Rev. 1:14, etc.). God's word is also likened unto fire (Jer. 23:29). It is referred to as an emblem of severe trials or misfortunes (Zech. 12:6; Luke 12:49; 1 Cor. 3:13, 15; 1 Pet. 1:7), and of eternal punishment (Matt. 5:22; Mark 9:44; Rev. 14:10; 21:8). The influence of the Holy Ghost is likened unto fire (Matt. 3:11). His descent was denoted by the appearance of tongues as of fire (Acts 2:3). Source: Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary.

Dream Interpretation

Fire is favorable to the dreamer if he does not get burned. It brings continued prosperity to seamen and voyagers, as well as to those on land.
To dream of seeing your home burning, denotes a loving companion, obedient children, and careful servants.
For a business man to dream that his store is burning, and he is looking on, foretells a great rush in business and profitable results.
To dream that he is fighting fire and does not get burned, denotes that he will be much worked and worried as to the conduct of his business. To see the ruins of his store after a fire, forebodes ill luck. He will be almost ready to give up the effort of amassing a handsome fortune and a brilliant business record as useless, but some unforeseen good fortune will bear him up again.
If you dream of kindling a fire, you may expect many pleasant surprises. You will have distant friends to visit.
To see a large conflagration, denotes to sailors a profitable and safe voyage. To men of literary affairs, advancement and honors; to business people, unlimited success. Source: Ten Thousand Dreams Interpreted ....

Literature

Fire (Anglo-Saxon, fyr, Greek, pur.)
St. Antony's fire. Erysipelas. "Le feu St Antoine. " (See Anthony.)
St. Helen's fire. "Ignis sanctæ Helenæ. "
"Feu St. Helme. " (See Castor and Pollux; and Elmo.)
Hermes's fire. Same as St. Helen's fire (q.v.).
I have myself passed through the fire; I have smelt the smell of fire. I have had experience in trouble. The allusion is to Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, who were cast into the fiery furnace by Nebuchadnezzar (Dan. iii.).
If you will enjoy the fire you must put up with the smoke. (Latin, "Commoditas quævis sua fert incommoda secum. ") Every convenience has its inconvenience.
More fire in the bed-straw. More mischief brewing. Alluding to the times when straw was used for carpets and beds.
No fire without smoke. (French, "Nul feu sans fumée. ") No good without its mixture of evil.
No smoke without fire. To every scandal there is some foundation.
Where there is smoke there is fire. Every effect is the result of some cause.
Fire The Great Fire of London (1666) broke out at Master Farryner's, the king's baker, in Pudding Lane, and after three nights and three days was arrested at Pie Corner. St. Paul's Cathedral, eighty-nine other churches, and 13,200 houses were burnt down. Source: Brewer's Dictionary.

Military & Defense

To detonate the main explosive charge by means of a firing system. Source: European Union. (references)
 The command given to discharge a weapon(s). Source: European Union. (references)

Mining

A. To explode or blow up. The expression "the pit has fired" signifies that an explosion of combustible gases has taken place b. To blast or explode with ammonium nitrate-fuel oil (ANFO), dynamite, or other explosive. c. A word shouted by miners as warning just before a shot is fired d. Fuel in a state of combustion, as on a hearth, in a grate, or furnace. A manifestation of rapid combustion or combination of materials with oxygen. e. Flashes of different spectral colors seen in diamonds and other gemstones with high birefringence as a result of dispersion.CF:play of color. (references)

Multilingual Slang

Catalan (txamusca). (references)

Tips from 1870

Usage: Fire, Throw. We fire a gun, but throw a stone. To fire a stone, fire him out of the house, fire him out of our employ, may be graphic ways of presenting the thought, but good writers never use them and good speakers should avoid them. Source: Slips of Speech.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

Top     

Specialty Definition: Fire

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)


larger version
A fire is a rapid oxidation process of combustible gases ejected from a fuel. It starts by subjecting the fuel to heat or another energy source, e.g. a match or lighter, and is sustained by the further release of heat energy. Controlling fire was one of humankind's first great achievements and made possible migration to colder climes which otherwise would have remained out of reach for colonization.

Fires and burning have often been used in religious sacrifices, as the smoke of the fire disperses into the heavens. Fire is one of the four classical elements, as well as one of the five Chinese elements.

The burning of wood is often the first association to the word fire, and trees have since ancient times supplied much of the energy needed by humans. In the past, metal smelting and charcoal production consumed large quantities of wood for their production. Nowadays, large scale energy is usually not produced by fires of burning wood, but has been replaced by hydrocarbon oil and coal, and in some cases nuclear energy or renewable energy sources. Wood burning remains a heat source in third world countries and where other sources of energy are unavailable.

There are four elements that maintain the combustion process, and the absence of any one of them will prevent a fire. The removal of these elements is the job of firefighters.

See also: campfire, List of historic fires, fire hydrant, smoking

External links

Fire can also refer to a Instant messaging client for Mac OS X. See Fire (software).

FIRE can also refer to the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education a civil liberties organization.

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Fire."

Top     



Fire (classical element)

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Fire is one of the four classical elements in ancient Greek philosophy and science. Fire is considered to be both hot and dry, and according to Plato is associated with the tetrahedron.

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Fire (classical element)."

Top     



Fire (software)

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Fire is a instant messenger client for Mac OS X (previously for OPENSTEP), that can access IRC, Jabber, AIM, ICQ, MSN, and Yahoo! Messenger. The most recent release is 0.32.f as of Friday, October 3rd, 2003.

External link

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Fire (software)."

Top     



Fire Pokémon

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Fire Pokémon are a certain type of Pokémon, including the following:

This list will be expanded as more Pokémon entries are created on Wikipedia.

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Fire Pokmon."

Top     



Firefighter

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Firefighters are persons who are trained and equipped to put out fires, rescue people and in some areas provide emergency medical services. The fire service, also known as the fire brigade in some countries is one of the emergency services.

Firefighting is the process and profession of extinguishing fires. Firefighting is important in urban areas where firefighters are on constant standby; in wildland areas, and on board ship.

Fire-fighting Skills

Note: this mostly discusses urban firefighting. See bushfire for a discussion of forest fires.

Firefighting has several basic skills: Prevention, self-preservation, rescue, preservation of property and fire control. All of these except prevention can be performed at the same time by a skilled fire-fighting team.

Prevention

Prevention attempts to assure that no place simultaneously has heat, fuel and air. Most prevention programs prevent heat. Every building, including residences, should have sprinklers. No life has ever been lost to fire in a residence with sprinklers. With the small rooms typical of a residence, one or two sprinklers can cover most rooms. If this is not possible, then at least have smoke detectors and a fire-extinguisher.

Self Preservation

Never enter a burning building unless you are a trained firefighter equipped with self-contained breathing apparatus (or equivalent).

Self-preservation is critical. A dead fire-fighter is no good to anyone. The basic technique is to know where you are, and avoid hazards. Work in teams. Keep your basic tools with you. Always keep a route out, and preserve it by irrigation. Don't depend on failing structures. Try to understand where the fire is going: Usually up, following fuel and air. Never get above the fire. If you have breathing equipment, use it. Otherwise, stay low, out of the gases. Avoid fuel that can flash-over. When the search is over, or the exit is threatened, if the building can't be saved, get out.

Rescue

Rescue consists of searching, and then removing people that are alive. Animals may also be recovered, if resources and conditions permit. Generally triage and first aid are performed outside. The general form of rescue is to shuffle through the structure with the right hand against the wall. Remember to search beds and cupboards, and identify oneself to victims. Many children are very frightened of fire-fighters in breathing masks.

Rescue may also involve the extrication of victims of motor vehicle accidents. More technical forms of rescue include subsets such as rope rescue, confined space rescue, and trench rescue. These types of rescue are often extremely hazardous and physically demanding.

Property

Buildings that are made of fuel, such as frame buildings, are different from fire-proof buildings such as concrete high-rises. Generally, the fire in a fire-proof building can be limited to a floor. Other floors can be safe simply by preventing smoke inhalation and damage. A burnable building must be evacuated.

Property preservation is a great help to people. Most fires can be limited to burning only the upper part of a frame structure. If possible, turn off the gas, electricity and water, and during the search, tip all the movable property into the middle of a room, and cover it with a heavy cloth tarp. This reduces damage from water, smoke and burning embers. If the structure doesn't catch, it's very helpful to ventilate it to reduce smoke damage.

Fire Control

Fire control consists of depriving a fire of fuel, oxygen or heat. The standard way is to remove heat by spraying the burning solid fuels with water from a fire-hose. Some fuels float on water, and are actually spread by water (such as gasoline). Some departments can use chemical dust even on large fires. These are preferable because the property damage can be so much less water. Petroleum fires are more often smothered with foam. In electrical fires, the crucial thing is to turn off the electricity.

Most fires spread as hot gases move through the structure. Some fires can be controlled or limited by venting these gases to the outside. This can aggravate a fire if it introduces new oxygen, or permits a draft past fuel or structure, so it should be attempted only by veteran fire fighters.

Firefighters are constantly training and updating their skills on equipment. Some of their tools include extrication equipment, ladder trucks, tanker trucks, pumper trucks, and ambulances.

History of fire brigades

to be written

National Information

France

Reflecting the rural nature of much of the country, the Volunteer Fire brigade (SPV), with over 190,000 firefighters is the largest firefighting force in France. In addition to being called out from work to attend an incident, they may be on standby at firestations outside their working hours. The Professional Fire Brigade (SPP) numbers over 30,000 firefighters, employed by the départements and working on shifts. In some towns there is a mixture of professionals and volunteers, in others only one or the other.

In Paris and Marseille, the fire brigades are made up of military personnel, but under the control of the Ministry of the Interior in a similar way to the Gendarmes. The Paris brigade (BSPP) has around 7 000 firefighters, and the BMPM in Marseille has over 2000.

French firefighters tackle over 3.6 million incidents each year: 10% fires, 10% traffic accidents, 59% other help to people, 21% other incidents (gas escapes, stuck elevators, etc).

Miscellanea

In popular literature, firefighters are usually depicted with Dalmatian dogs.

See also

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Firefighter."

Top     



Wildfire

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)


Fire in San Bernardino, California Mountains
(image taken from the International Space Station)

A wildfire, also known as a forest fire (or bushfire in Australasia), is an uncontrolled fire in wildland often caused by lightning; other common causes are human carelessness and arson.

Drought and the prevention of small forest fires are major contributors to extreme forest fires.

Background

Wildfires are common in many places around the world, including much of the vegetated areas of Australia, forest areas of the United States and Canada, where the climates are sufficiently moist to allow the growth of trees, but feature extended dry, hot periods when fallen branches, leaves, and other material can dry out and becomes highly flammable. Wildfires are also common in grasslands and scrublands. Wildfires tend to be most common and severe during years of drought and occur on days of strong winds. With extensive urbanization of wildlands, these fires often involve destruction of suburban homes located in the wildland urban intermix.

Today it is accepted that wildfires are a natural part of the ecosystem of wildlands, where, at the least, plants have evolved to survive fires by a variety of strategies (from possessing reserve shoots that sprout after a fire, to fire-resistant seeds), or even encourage fire (for example eucalypts contain flammable oils in the leaves) as a way to eliminate competition from less fire-tolerant species. Most native animals, too, are adept at surviving wildfires.

On occasions, wildfires have caused large-scale damage to private property, particularly when they have reached urban-fringe communities, destroying many homes and causing deaths.

Slash, small, rotten, mis-shapen, or otherwise undesirable wood discarded during logging, has historically provided the fuel for devastating fires such as the fires in Michigan in the 19th century.

The aftermath of a wildfire can be as disastrous if not more so than the actual fire itself. A particularly destructive fire burns away all the plants and trees which prevented erosion. If heavy rains occur after such a fire, landslides, ash flows, and flash floods are to be expected. Not only does this result in severe property damage for those living in the immediate fire area, but it also affects the quality of the local water supply.


Green Knoll Wildfire
in Jackson, Wyoming

Prevention

For many decades the policy of the United States Forest Service was to surpress all fires, and this policy was epitomized by the mascot Smokey the Bear and was also the basis of parts of the movie Bambi. The policy began to be questioned in the 1960s, when it was realized that no new sequoias had been grown in the redwood forests of California, because fire is an essential part of their life cycle. This produced the policy of controlled burns to reduce underbrush. This clears much of the undergrowth through forest and woodland areas, making travel and hunting much easier while reducing the risk of dangerous high-intensity fires caused by many years of fuel buildup.

However, the previous policy of absolute fire suppression in the United States had resulted in the buildup of fuel resulting in large and severe fires such as the fire in Yellowstone National Park in 1988. Urbanization can also result in fuel buildup and devastating fires, such as those in Los Alamos, New Mexico, East Bay Hills, within the California cities of Oakland and Berkeley, between October 19 and 22, 1991, all over Colorado in 2002, and throughout Southern California in October, 2003.

On average, wildfires burn 4.3 million acres (1.7 million hectares) in the United States annually. In recent years the federal government has spent $1 billion a year on fire suppression. 2002 was a record year for fires with major fires in Arizona, California, Colorado, and Oregon.

The risk of major wildfires can be reduced by reducing the amount of fuel present. In wildland, this can be accomplished by either conducting "controlled burns" - deliberately setting areas ablaze under less dangerous weather conditions in spring or autumn - or physical fuel removal by removing some trees as is conducted in many American forests. Both approaches are controversial with some environmentalists, who regard them as tampering with the forest ecosystem.

People living in fire-prone areas typically take a variety of precautions, including building their homes out of flame-resistant materials, reducing the amount of fuel near the home or property (including firebreaks - their own miniature control lines, in effect), and investing in their own firefighting equipment.

Rural farming communities are rarely threatened directly by wildfire. These types of communities are usually located in large areas of cleared, usually grazed, land, and in the drought conditions present in wildfire years there is often very little grass left on such grazed areas. Hence the risk is minimized. However, urban fringes have spread into forested areas, for example in Sydney and Melbourne, and communities have literally built themselves in the middle of highly flammable forests. These communities are at high risk of destruction in bushfires.

Fire suppression

Most fire-prone areas have large firefighter services to help control bushfires. As well as the water-spraying trucks most commonly used in urban firefighting, bushfire services use a variety of alternative techniques. They often possess aircraft, particularly helicopters, that can douse areas that are inaccessible to ground crews and deliver greater quantities of water and/or flame retardant chemicals. However, large fires are of such a size that no conceivable firefighting service could attempt to douse the whole fire directly, and so alternative techniques are used.

In alternative approaches, firefighters attempt to control the fire by controlling the area that it can spread to, by creating "control lines", which are areas that contain no combustible material. These control lines can be produced by physically removing fuel (for instance, with a bulldozer), or by "backburning", in which small, low-intensity fires are started to burn the flammable material in a (hopefully) controlled way. These may then be extinguished by firefighters, or, ideally, directed in such a way that they meet the main fire front, at which point both fires run out of flammable material and are thus extinguished.

Unfortunately, such methods can fail in the face of wind shifts causing fires to miss control lines or to jump straight over them (for instance, because a burning tree falls across a line, burning embers are carried by the wind over the line, or burning tumbleweeds cross the line).

The actual goals of firefighters vary. Protection of life (those of both the firefighters and "civilians") is given top priority, then private property according to economic and social value and also to its "savability" (for example, more effort will be expended on saving a house with a tile roof than one with a wooden-shake roof). In very severe, large fires, this is sometimes the only possible action. Protecting houses is regarded as more important than, say, farming machinery sheds, although firefighters, if possible, try to keep fires off farmland to protect stock and fences (steel fences are destroyed by the passage of fire, as the wire is irreversibly stretched and weakened by it). Preventing the burning of publicly-owned forested areas is generally of least priority, and, indeed, it is quite common (in Australia, at least) for firefighters to simply observe a fire burn towards control lines through forest rather than attempt to put it out more quickly - it is, after all, a natural process.

Famous wildfires in North America

External Links

Further Reading

Top     

Abbreviations & Acronyms: Fire

The following table is compiled from various sources, across various languages. When English abbreviations or acronyms come from a non-English source, this is noted.
EntrySourceExpressionField

FIRE

EnglishFinance,Insurance and Real EstateFinance
FIDESEnglishFire Detecting Electronic SensorN/A

Source: compiled by the editor, based on several corpora (additional references).

Top     

Synonyms: Fire

Synonyms: ardor (n), ardour (n), attack (n), blast (n), fervency (n), fervidness (n), fervor (n), fervour (n), firing (n), flack (n), flak (n), flame (n), flaming (n), arouse (v), burn (v), burn down (v), can (v), discharge (v), dismiss (v), elicit (v), enkindle (v), evoke (v), force out (v), fuel (v), give notice (v), give the axe (v), go off (v), kindle (v), open fire (v), provoke (v), raise (v), sack (v), send away (v), terminate (v). (additional references)
Antonym: hire (v). (additional references)

Top     

Synonyms within Context: Fire

ContextSynonyms within Context (source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus).

Abrogation

Dismiss, discard; cast off, turn off, cast out, cast adrift, cast out of doors, cast aside, cast away; send off, send away, send packing, send about one's business; discharge, get rid of; (eject); bounce; fire, fire out; sack.

Affections

Energy, fervor, fire, force.

Ejection

Eject, reject; expel, discard; cut, send to coventry, boycott; chasser; banish; (punish); bounce ; fire, fire out; throw; throw out, throw up, throw off, throw away, throw aside; push; throw out, throw off, throw away, throw aside; shovel out, shovel away, sweep out, sweep away; brush off, brush away, whisk off, whisk away, turn off, turn away, send off, send away; discharge; send adrift, turn adrift, cast adrift; turn out, bundle out; throw overboard; give the sack to; send packing, send about one's business, send to the right about; strike off the roll; (abrogate); turn out neck and heels, turn out head and shoulders, turn out neck and crop; pack off; send away with a flea in the ear; send to Jericho; bow out, show the door to.

Excitability

Passion, excitement, flush, heat; fever, heat; fire, flame, fume, blood boiling; tumult; effervescence, ebullition; boiling over; whiff, gust, story, tempest; scene, breaking out, burst, fit, paroxysm, explosion; outbreak, outburst; agony.

Lose one's temper; break out, burst out, fly out; go off, fly off, fly off at a tangent, fly off the handle, lose one's cool; explode, flare up, flame up, fire up, burst into a flame, take fire, fire, burn; boil, boil over; foam, fume, rage, rave, rant, tear; go wild, run wild, run mad, go into hysterics; run riot, run amuck; battre la campagne, faire le diable a quatre, play the deuce.

Excitation

Verb: excite, affect, touch, move, impress, strike, interest, animate, inspire, impassion, smite, infect; stir the blood, fire the blood, warm the blood; set astir; wake, awake, awaken; call forth; evoke, provoke; raise up, summon up, call up, wake up, blow up, get up, light up; raise; get up the steam, rouse, arouse, stir; fire, kindle, enkindle, apply the torch, set on fire, inflame.

Heat

Phlogiston; fire, spark, scintillation, flash, flame, blaze; bonfire; firework, pyrotechnics, pyrotechny; wildfire; sheet of fire, lambent flame; devouring element; adiathermancy; recalescence.

Insulation, Fire extinction

Fire code, fire regulations, fire; fire inspector; code violation, citation.

Physical Energy

Noun: energy, physical energy, force, power; keenness; Adjective: intensity, vigor, strength, elasticity; go; high pressure; fire; rush.

Vigor

Noun: vigor, power, force; boldness, raciness; Adjective: intellectual, force; spirit, point, piquance, piquancy; verve, glow, fire, warmth; strong language; gravity, sententiousness; elevation, loftiness, sublimity.

Source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus.

Top     

Crosswords: Fire

Non-English Usage: "Fire" is also a word in the following languages with English translations in parentheses.

Danish (four), Norwegian (four, lower), Romanian (character, disposition, feather, fiber, fibre, grain, mettle, nature, sort, spirit, temper), Turkish (leakage, outage, shrinkage, turnover, ullage, Wantage, wastage).

Top     

Modern Usage: Fire

DomainUsage

Screenplays

There's just something about an anatomically correct rubber suit that puts fire in a girl's lips (Batman & Robin; writing credit: Akiva Goldsman)

Though the fire seemed to spread through the quarter, I stood on that deck, fearful he would come out again from the very river, like some monster, to destroy us both (Interview with the Vampire: The Vampire Chronicles; writing credit: Anne Rice)

I am glad you are late. This chicken took longer than I expected Hope it isn't done too much Of course, it caught on fire once I think it is better that I cut it out here, unless you want half of one for yourself (Notorious; writing credit: Ben Hecht)

Did you catch fire again (Lilo & Stitch; writing credit: Chris Sanders)

An object of affection to quench your royal fire. Completely free from infection (Coming to America; writing credit: David Sheffield)

Lyrics

I've seen fire and I've seen rain (Fire And Rain; performing artist: James Taylor)

Oh, But The Fire Went Wild (Ring Of Fire; performing artist: JOHNNY CASH; writing credit: June Carter and Merle Kilgore)

Keep the fire burnin' (Keep The Fire Burnin; performing artist: REO Speedwagon)

There's nothin like a bath of fire (Bath Of Fire; performing artist: The Presidents)

When lovers hearts catch fire (When Smokey Sings; performing artist: ABC)

Clever

The fire you kindle for your enemy often burns yourself more than him. (references; author: Chinese Proverb)

Friendly fire isn't. (references; author: unknown)

Hell has no fire escapes. (references; author: unknown)

Incoming fire has the right of way. (references; author: unknown)

Don't look conspicuous: it draws fire. (references; author: unknown)

Movie/TV Titles

Fire (1997)

Under Fire (1995)

Reign of Fire (2002)

Fire Over Afghanistan (2003)

Angel on Fire (1974)

Song Titles

Fire (performing artist: The Crazy World of Arthur Brown)

Light My Fire (performing artist: The Doors)

Fire and Rain (performing artist: James Taylor)

Paper In Fire (performing artist: John Cougar Mellencamp)

St. Elmo's Fire (Man In Motion) (performing artist: John Parr)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

Top     

Commercial Usage: Fire

DomainTitle

References

  • Chiyoda Fire and Marine Insurance Company, Limited: International Competitive Benchmarks and Financial Gap Analysis (reference)

  • Koa Fire and Marine Insurance Company, Limited: International Competitive Benchmarks and Financial Gap Analysis (reference)

  • Mitsui Marine & Fire Insurance Co Ltd: International Competitive Benchmarks and Financial Gap Analysis (reference)

  • Daehan Fire & Marine Insurance Co., Ltd.: International Competitive Benchmarks and Financial Gap Analysis (reference)

  • Taiyo Fire and Marine Insurance Company, Limited: International Competitive Benchmarks and Financial Gap Analysis (reference)

    (more reference examples)

  

Books

  • Fire Your Stock Analyst: Analyzing Stocks On Your Own (reference)

  • A new, cheape, and delicate fire of cole-balles, wherein seacole is by the mixture of other combustible bodies, both sweetened and multiplied, also a speedie way for the winning of any breach; with some other new and seruiceable inuentions answerable to t (reference)

  • Earth, Air, Fire, and Water: More Techniques of Natural Magic (Llewellyn's Practical Magick Series) (reference)

  • Face the Fire (Three Sisters Island Trilogy) (reference)

  • Fire Alarm Signaling Systems/Fass94 (reference)

    (more book examples)

  

Periodicals

  

Theater & Movies

  

Music

  

High Tech

  

Consumer Goods

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

Top     

Image Slideshow: Fire

Photos:
Fire

More pictures...

Illustrations:
Fire

More pictures...

Computer Images:
Fire

More pictures...

Top     

Photo Album: Fire

ThumbnailDescription & CreditThumbnailDescription & Credit

This is a cartoon from Harper's Weekly circa 1890. It shows an office worker, whose smoking cigar is drooping from his mouth, reading a sign on the wall: "No Smoking In Offices During Office Hours". The caption reads: "another civic-service outrage. Less smoke and more fire". Credit: Unknown photographer/artist.

Fire and emergency response personnel practice techniques for hazardous materials containment and removal. Credit: CDC.

Burning building and firefighter at Emory Village, Atlanta, Georgia, January 1979. Fire, smoke. Credit: CDC.

"Curtains of Fire 1" by Jerry Thornhill.

Tracking Fire Trends From Space. Credit: NASA.

Project Fire. Credit: NASA.

Apollo 1 Fire. Credit: NASA.

Carrying the fire bucket for cold fingers and frozen fountain pens Level party of William Gibson. Credit: Coast & Geodetic Survey Historical Image Collection.

Ferdinand Hassler directing movement of the Great Theodolite on Fire Island Angle measurements at the end points of the Fire Island Base Line Probably sketched by Assistant John Farley. Credit: Coast & Geodetic Survey Historical Image Collection.

Dennison's Exchange and Parker House before the fire, December 1849. In: "The Annals of San Francisco". Frank Soule, John Gihon, and James Nesbit. 1855. Page 242. D. Appleton & Company, New York. F869.S3.S7 1855. Credit: America's Coastlines.

Source: pictures compiled by the editor from various references; see picture credits.

Top     

Digital Photo Gallery: Fire
 

"Fire" by Bernie Zajac
Commentary: "Capturing some of the warmth of a camp fire on one of our camping trips."
"Hot Like Fire" by Mary Day
Commentary: "A Campfire!."

Source: photographs selected by the editor, with permission from the photographers.

Top     

Sounds Captioned with "Fire".

PlayCaptionPlayCaption
Police siren and fire truck horn.Fire crackling.
Fire alarm ringing to signify a building fire.School bell ringing to signify the end of class; fire alarm bell ringing.
Fire extinguisher blowing fire-extinguishing foam.Fire truck horn.
A 45 caliber small machine gun or automatic weapon fire.Firing of a laser gun; phaser fire;.
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

Top     

Familiar Quotations: Fire

AuthorQuotation

Author Unknown

A spark of kindness starts a fire of love.

Benjamin Disraeli

Courage is fire, and bullying is smoke.

Benjamin Franklin

The proof of gold is fire...
Keep flax from fire, youth from gaming.

Confucius

True gold fears not the fire.

Desiderius Erasmus

Fire and sea and woman, three evils.

John Heywood

The fat is in the fire.

Mikhail A. Bakunin

Throw theory into the fire; it only spoils life.

Thomas Fuller

Zeal without knowledge is fire without light.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

Top     

Historic Usage: Fire

AuthorDateQuotation

John Locke

1690

The first is, If he endeavour to overturn the government, that is, if he have a purpose and design to ruin the kingdom and commonwealth, as it is recorded of Nero, that he resolved to cut off the senate and people of Rome, lay the city waste with fire and sword, and then remove to some other place. (Second Treatise of Government)

Treaty of Versailles

1919

Where by administrative or legislative action an insurance against fire effected before the war has been transferred during the war from the original to another insurer, the transfer will be recognised and the liability of the original insurer will be deemed to have ceased as from the date of the transfer. (reference)

John F. Kennedy

1961

The energy, the faith, the devotion which we bring to this endeavor will light our country and all who serve it--and the glow from that fire can truly light the world. (reference)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

Top     

Use in Literature: Fire

TitleAuthorQuote

Sylvie and Bruno Concluded

Carroll, Lewis

If a fire breaks out, the taps are turned, and in one minute the theatre is flooded, up to the very roof

A Christmas Carol

Dickens, Charles

Becoming immediately sensible of the impropriety, he poked the fire, and extinguished the last frail spark for ever

Scarlet Letter

Hawthorne, Nathaniel

My heart was a habitation large enough for many guests, but lonely and chill, and without a household fire.

Les Miserables

Hugo, Victor

Nothing was stirring, not a bivouac fire was extinguished

Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

Joyce, James

Mother was sitting at the fire with Dante waiting for Brigid to bring in the tea.

Grapes of Wrath

Steinbeck, John

In half an hour we set fire to the camp

Gulliver's Travels

Swift, Jonathan

I found some shellfish on the shore, and ate them raw, not daring to kindle a fire, for fear of being discovered by the natives

Walden

Thoreau, Henry David

After having taken medicine, and fasted for three days, all the fire in the town is extinguished

Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead

Tom Stoppard

Rosencrantz: Fire! Guildenstern: Where

Macbeth

William Shakespeare

Double, double toil and trouble; Fire burn and cauldron bubble

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

Top     

Non-Fiction Usage: Fire

SubjectTopicQuote

Health

During a seizure, neurons may fire as many as 500 times a second, much faster than the normal rate of about 80 times a second. (references)

Tobacco kills more than 430,000 U.S. citizens each year-more than alcohol, cocaine, heroin, homicide, suicide, car accidents, fire, and AIDS combined. (references)

Loss of dopamine causes the nerve cells of the striatum to fire out of control, leaving patients unable to direct or control their movements in a normal manner. (references)

Business

The local Fire Department is the enforcing authority. (references)

Fire extinguishers are distributed by a few specialized firms. (references)

Following is fire prevention equipment (80 percent), and arms (60 percent). (references)

Children

Tuvalu

In March 2000, a fire destroyed a girls' boarding school, with 19 fatalities. (references)

Kenya

In a letter to the Minister of Education, FIDA demanded that the Government fire these teachers. (references)

Macedonia

Despite government cease-fires to permit their departure and ICRC-provided transport to safe points, some ethnic-Albanian parents elected to remain in their homes with their children in conflict areas during combat operations, and at least one child was killed by artillery fire as a result. (references)

Civil Liberties

Haiti

They began to throw stones and fire weapons. (references)

Macedonia

The next night, on December 9, the mosque in Bitola caught fire. (references)

Haiti

They were escorted to the local fire station and were aided by government authorities. (references)

Economic History

Pakistan

The American Cultural Center in Lahore also was destroyed by fire. (references)

Guyana

Several businesses and homes were destroyed by fire during this period. (references)

Libya

The U.S. planes returned fire and shot down the attacking Libyan aircraft. (references)

Human Rights

Jamaica

He questioned whether police came under fire. (references)

Guinea-Bissau

The LGDH consequently convinced President Yala to fire Sanha. (references)

Zimbabwe

He also was forced to strip naked and sit very close to a fire. (references)

Indigenous People

Bangladesh

Bengalis later set fire to more than 100 houses belonging to tribals. (references)

Minorities

Lebanon

Later that month, arsonists set fire to a north Lebanese mosque. (references)

Kenya

Police officers did not believe the fire to be religiously motivated. (references)

Political Economy

India

The Government extended a cease fire in Jammu and Kashmir, begun in November 2000, until May. (references)

Guyana

Part of a block in the main business district was gutted by fire causing severe losses for several businesses. (references)

THAILAND

In practice, however, cases of management action against union organizers occur, and employers use loopholes in the law to fire union organizers. (references)

Political Rights

Cote d'Ivoire

Sub-national governments generally must rely on the central Government for much of their revenue, but mayors have autonomy to hire and fire community administrative personnel. (references)

Armenia

In a July 1999 by-election in Yerevan's Achapniak district, violence erupted when armed supporters of one of the candidates beat and opened fire on supporters of another candidate. (references)

Trade

Hong Kong

What few there are relate to fire control (gas and electricity) in the city's high rise buildings. (references)

Travel

Azerbaijan

With the closing of the Ramstore due to fire in Summer 2001, there are no large, American-style supermarkets now operating in Baku. (references)

Switzerland

Countrywide emergency telephone numbers are: Police 117; Fire 118; and Ambulance 144. There is usually an English-speaking contact available. (references)

Women

Jordan

The boy repeatedly struck his sister in the head with a club before covering her body in kerosene and setting it on fire. (references)

Worker Rights

Saint Lucia

The law prohibits members of the police and fire departments from striking. (references)

Bangladesh

A November 2000 garment factory fire resulted in the death of 10 child workers. (references)

Thailand

Courts continued to hear testimony in the case of the 1993 Kader Toy Factory fire. (references)

Lexicography

Devil's Dictionary

ALTAR, n. The place whereupon the priest formerly raveled out the small intestine of the sacrificial victim for purposes of divination and cooked its flesh for the gods. The word is now seldom used, except with reference to the sacrifice of their liberty and peace by a male and a female tool. They stood before the altar and supplied The fire themselves in which their fat was fried. In vain the sacrifice! -- no god will claim An offering burnt with an unholy flame. M.P. Nopput

Source: compiled by the editor from ICON Group International, Inc.; see credits.

Top     

Spoken Usage: Fire

SpeakerPhrase(s)

Heather Mercer and Dayna Curry

Well Heather is the one that started it, and we started adding our scarves as well, to make a fire, so the helicopter could see us better.

Robert Novak

Senator, as a side issue, President Bush has come under fire for some stock transactions he made as a private citizen long ago. Vice President Cheney under fire for some decisions he may have made as CEO of Halliburton.

Rudolph Giuliani

You got it. It's a police officer has been shot, fire fighter has been burned, some terrible tragedy has occurred, a plane has crashed.

Rush Limbaugh

In the real world, at least eight Americans were killed when two helicopters took enemy fire in the largest offensive of the five-month war to root terrorists out of Afghanistan.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

Top     

Speeches: Fire

SpeakerTermPhrase(s)

George Washington

1789-1797A fire not to be quenched, it demands a uniform vigilance to prevent its bursting into a flame, lest, instead of warming, it should consume.

Thomas Jefferson

1801-1809To justify a general conclusion, requires many observations, even where the subject may be submitted to the anatomical knife, to optical classes, to analysis by fire, or by solvents.

William H. Taft

1909-1913We must not now, therefore, keep up a fire in the rear of the agents whom we have authorized to do our work on the Isthmus.

Lyndon B. Johnson

1963-1969For finally I must be the one to order our guns to fire, against all the most inward pulls of my desire.

Jimmy Carter

1977-1981This program is essential to the continued ability of our local governments to provide essential police, fire and sanitation services.

Ronald Reagan

1981-1989There, on the western front, he was killed trying to carry a message between battalions under heavy artillery fire.

Bill Clinton

1993-2001But I am persuaded that the real credit belongs to the people who sent us here, who pay our salaries, who hold our feet to the fire.

George W. Bush

2001-2005Stronger police and fire departments will mean safer neighborhoods.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

Top     

Usage Frequency: Fire

"Fire" is generally used as a noun (singular) -- approximately 94.62% of the time. "Fire" is used about 13,677 times out of a sample of 100 million words spoken or written in English. Its rank is based on over 700,000 words used in the English language. Some parts-of-speech are not covered due to the samples used by the British National Corpus. (note: percents less than one-hundredth of one percent have been omitted)
Parts of SpeechPercentUsage per
100 Million Words
Rank in English
Noun (singular)94.62%12,941715
Lexical Verb (infinitive)4.24%58010,911
Noun (proper)0.72%9833,072
Lexical Verb (base form)0.42%5744,859
                    Total100.00%13,677N/A

Source: compiled by the editor from several corpora; see credits.

Top     

Name Usage Frequency: Fire

The following table summarizes the usage of "fire" based on a population census conducted in the United States. Ranks and frequencies are based on all names reported and classified.
NameUsage/GenderUsage per 100
million Persons
Rank in USA
FireLast name13057,287
Source: compiled by the editor from several corpora; see credits.

Top     

Derived & Related Names: Fire

The following table summarizes names derived from the word "fire".
 
NameGenderLanguageMeaning
UriasN/AN/A

The Lord is my light or fire

AshbelN/ABiblical

An old fire

AshkenazN/ABiblical

A fire that spreads

AskelonN/ABiblical

Fire of infamy

Esh-baalN/ABiblical

The fire of the idol

Esh-banN/ABiblical

Fire of the sun

IriN/ABiblical

Fire

JehoashN/ABiblical

Fire of the Lord

JosiahN/ABiblical

The fire of the Lord

KallaiN/ABiblical

Resting by fire

UrN/ABiblical

Fire

UriN/ABiblical

My fire

UriahN/ABiblical

The Lord is my light or fire

JosiasN/ABiblical (Variant)

The fire of the Lord

FintanMaleIrish

A white fire

FionntánMaleIrish

A white fire

FiammettaFemaleItalian

A fire

UrjaszN/APolish

The Lord is my light or fire

FionntánMaleScottish

A white fire

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

 

Top     

Usage in Company Names: Fire

CountryNameCountryName
Japan

Chiyoda Fire and Marine Insurance Company, Limited

South Korea

Daehan Fire & Marine Insurance Co., Ltd.

USA

United Fire & Casualty Co

 (more examples...)  

Source: compiled by the editor from Icon Group International, Inc.

Top     

Expressions: Fire

Expressions using "fire": a fire of musketry accidental fire accuracy of fire actionable fire ad out of the frying pan into the fire add fuel to the fire adjust fire adjustment fire adjustment of fire aimed fire all the fat in the fire angel Fire angle of fire annoying fire Anthony's Fire antiaircraft fire artillery fire artillery fire plan table attacking a fire automatic fire alarm automatic fire system back fire ball of fire bank up fire baptism of fire barrage fire be on fire be under fire Beacon fire belch fire belt of fire big fire blazing fire blow the fire blow up the fire Blue fire brush fire burst of fire bush fire by fire and sword by sacrificial fire call fire camp fire girls cannon fire catch fire catching fire cease fire close supporting fire come under fire coming from fire concentrated fire confine a fire continuous fire continuous illumination fire controlled fire coordinated illumination fire Council fire counterbattery fire countermortar fire counterpreparation fire covering fire cross fire crown fire curved fire cyclic rate of fire damp down a fire danger of fire dead fire Death fire deep supporting fire defensive fire destruction fire destruction fire mission die in a fire Direct fire direct fire battery direct fire target direct fire weapon direct supporting fire distributed fire Dropping fire economic fire protection theory electric fire Elf fire elmos fire Elmo's fire enfilade fire escaped fire european fire salamander exposing fire exposure fire extinguish the fire False fire fan the fire feed the fire feeling for fire fen fire fields of fire final protective fire fire a blank shoot fire a missile. Additional references.

Hyphenated Usage

Beginning with "fire": fire-alarm, fire-alarms, fire-and-brimstone, fire-and-forget, fire-and-thunder, fire-ants, fire-appliances, fire-arms, fire-arrows, fire-assay, fire-back, fire-ball, fire-balloons, fire-bar, fire-beating, fire-bed, fire-bell, fire-bellied, fire-bellied toad, fire-birds, fire-blackened, fire-blasted, fire-boat, fire-bolts, fire-bomb, fire-bombed, fire-bomber, fire-bombers, fire-bombing, fire-bombs, fire-box, fire-brand, fire-break, fire-breathing, fire-brick, fire-bricks, fire-bridge, fire-brigade, fire-broken, fire-bucket, fire-buckets, fire-carts, fire-charred, fire-cock, fire-comer, fire-control, fire-control, fire-control radar, fire-control system, fire-crested wren, fire-crew, fire-crowned, fire-cults, fire-damaged, fire-damp, fire-dazzled, fire-detection, fire-direction, fire-dogs, fire-dragon, fire-draught, fire-drill, fire-eater, fire-eaters, fire-eating, fire-em, fire-engine, fire-engines, fire-escape, fire-escapes, fire-exit, fire-extinguisher, fire-extinguishers, fire-extinguishing, fire-eyed, fire-falls, fire-fan, Fire-fanged, fire-festivals, fire-fight, fire-fighter, fire-fighters, fire-fighting, fire-fighting services, fire-fighting vehicle, fire-fights, fire-finder, fire-fish, fire-flies, fire-fountaining, fire-free, fire-front, fire-gilding, fire-glass, fire-glow, fire-grate, fire-guard, fire-gutted, fire-hall, fire-hazard, fire-hearth, fire-heat, fire-hole, Fire-horse, fire-hoses, fire-hydrant, fire-insulating, fire-insurance, fire-iron, fire-irons, fire-light, fire-lighter, fire-lighters, fire-lighting, fire-lit, fire-load, fire-lock, fire-makers, fire-missiles, fire-mounts, fire-mouths, Fire-new, fire-notice, fire-officer, fire-officers, fire-on-the-mountain, fire-opal, fire-party, fire-pit, fire-place, fire-places, fire-plan, fire-plug, fire-polished, fire-power, fire-power umbrella, fire-prone, fire-proof, fire-proofed, fire-protected, fire-protection, fire-raiser, fire-raising, fire-ravaged, fire-red, fire-reddened, fire-resistance, fire-resistance test, fire-resistant, fire-resisting, fire-resistive, fire-retardant, fire-return, fire-risk, fire-sale price, fire-salvaged, fire-scarred, fire-seat, fire-sensitive, Fire-set, fire-setting, fire-shower, fire-side, fire-sign, fire-signals, fire-siren, fire-snow, fire-soul, fire-spewing, fire-spitting, fire-spotter, fire-spread, fire-starter, fire-sticks, fire-storm, fire-storms, fire-streaked, fire-strung, fire-surround, fire-swallower, fire-swim, fire-tail, fire-tailed, fire-tanged, fire-tapestries, fire-temple, fire-tinge, fire-tinged, fire-tipped, fire-tolerant, fire-tongs, fire-trail, fire-training, fire-trap, fire-tree, fire-walkers, Fire-watch, fire-watcher, fire-watchers, fire-watching, fire-weed, fire-wheels, fire-woman, fire-wood, fire-worker, fire-worm, fire-worship, fire-worshippers, fire-wound.

Ending with "fire": cannon-fire, cross-fire, gas-fire, gun-fire, hell-fire, musket-fire, quick-fire, shell-fire, under-fire, wild-fire.

Containing "fire": Center-fire cartridge, naval gun-fire liaison team, no-fire line, non-fire-propagating, Rapid-fire mount, rapid-fire pistol, rapid-fire rifle, rescue and fire-fighting service, Rim-fire cartridge, Stink-fire lance.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

Top     

Frequency of Internet Keywords: Fire

The following statistics estimate the number of searches per day across the major English-language search engines as identified by various trade publications. Hyperlinks lead to commercial use of the expression at Amazon.com.
 
ExpressionFrequency
per Day
ExpressionFrequency
per Day

fire

6,608

fire inside

513

club fire night station

4,617

arizona fire

503

angel fire

2,760

sentry fire safe

466

fire fighter

2,515

aspen fire

455

fire truck

2,137

chicago fire

452

fire department

1,552

fire picture

427

fire fighting

1,392

reign of fire

395

breath of fire

1,358

fire ring

389

earth wind fire

1,278

fire mountain gem

387

fire hot quote

1,258

fire engine

372

fire pit

1,171

harry potter goblet of fire

367

forest fire

1,032

we didn t start the fire

359

fire ant

934

fire emblem

354

fire extinguisher

853

breath of fire 2

336

new york fire fighter

742

fire place

322

fire island

664

fire equipment

320

fire works

646

fire grill ice

304

fire safety

595

angel fire new mexico

299

fire safe

581

fire alarm

290

fire and ice

566

breath of fire 3

290
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

Top     

Modern Translation: Fire

Language Translations for "fire"; alternative meanings/domain in parentheses.

Afrikaans

  

vuur, ontslaan (discharge, dismiss, sack), brand (burn, conflagration). (various references)

   

Albanian

  

fugë (fugue, garden warbler, peg top, right away, run, very quickly, whipping top, whirligig), zjarrmi (Ardor, ardour, fervor, fervour, fever, glow, heat, temperature), zjarr (Ardor, ardour, bale-fire, blaze, fervency, fervor, fervour, flame, glimmers, gunfire, gun-layer, heat, impetuosity, light), vë zjarr (burn down, ignite, kindle), shtie (abort, inoculate, insert, insinuate, introduce, pour, put, shoot), qitje me armë, pjek (bake, calcinate, decrepitate, grill, ripen, roast), pasion (appetence, appetency, flame, infatuation, oestrum, oestrus, passion), ndizet (flame, flare, light), ndez (activate, burn, enkindle, fire up, foment, heat, ignite, inflame, kindle, light, make the fire, set fire, set light to, set on fire, switch on, turn on), merr zjarr (catch fire, flame out, flame up), merr flakë, lëshoj (cede, concede, dart, depasture, discharge, ease, effuse, emit, exhale, fetch, flop, get off, give, give off, give out, give rise to, heave, heave a sigh, issue, let, let fall, let go, let loose, let off, pay, project, radiate, relieve, send, set on, shed, shoot, sluice, throw down, touch off, trip, unbrace, unbridle, uncork, uncouple, unleash, unmuzzle, unrein, untuck, utter), ethe (chill, fever, shake, temperature). (various references)

   

Arabic 

  

‏تلفظ بقوة, ‏رد بالنار, ‏ثور (beef, bovine, bull, ferment, heat, ox, ramp, rampage, rebel, revolt, revolutionize, rise, set against, steer, storm, take the bit in one's hands), ‏أشعل (burn, enkindle, fan the flame, ignite, inflame, kindle, light, light up, lit, rekindle, switch on, torch, turn on), ‏أطلق (cast, cast off, divorce, draw, eject, emanate, enlarge, erupt, evolve, generalize, give off, liberate, loose, open, project, relax, release, shoot, slip, speed, spout, toss, touch off, unchain, unlock, utter), ‏أحرق (blaze, burn, burnt, char, deflagrate, incinerate, kiln, light, parch, scald, sear, singe, sizzle, smart, sting), ‏إطلاق النار (discharge), ‏طلقة (bullet, crack, shot), ‏شعلة (blaze, flame, torch), ‏سخن قليلا, وقد (burning, fuel), ‏حريق (blaze), ‏غضب (aggravate, anger, annoy, be angry, be irritated, chafe, crab, dander, displease, embitter, enrage, exasperate, exasperation, flounce, fret, fume, gall, get on his nerves, get smb.'s goat, go mad, grumpiness, harrow, heat, incense, indignation, inflame, infuriate, irascibility, ire, irritate, irritation, itch, jitter, lose one's shirt, mad, madden, miff, nettle, offend, outcry, outrage, peeve, pet, pique, pout, provoke, rage, resentment, rile, rough, ruffle, seethe, soreness, sour, spite, spleen, twit, vex), ‏حماس (enthusiasm, heartiness, intense interest), ‏حماسة (abandonment, ardor, ardour, eagerness, ebullience, elan, enthusiasm, fervency, fervor, fervour, glow, heartiness, impetus, intense interest, keenness, mettle, rage, responsiveness, warmth, zeal), ‏وقود (fuel), ‏قتل (assassinate, assassination, bag, butcher, croak, death, despatch, dispatch, do in, end, finish, homicide, immolate, kill, killing, knock off, lay out, manslaughter, murder, poleaxe, procure, put down, put to death, shoot, slay, take for a ride), ‏نار (flame, flare, heat, light), ‏فصل (adjudge, adjudicate, arrive at a resolution, break, break up, cashier, cut, cut off, decide, decision, demarcation, detach, detail, determine, discharge, disconnect, disconnection, disentangle, disjoin, disjunction, dismiss, displace, displacement, dissociate, dissociate oneself from, dissociation, disunite, divide, division, elaborate, expel, have a final word, isolate, isolation, itemize, judge, lay off, make a decision, part, particularize, parting, partition, remove, render a judgement, resolve, sack, seclude, seclusion, segregate, segregation, separate, separation, set apart, settle, sever, severance, sunder, wean), ‏زاد النار إشتعالا. (various references)

   

Basque

  

piztu (light to, set on fire to). (various references)

   

Bulgarian 

  

зачервявам се (become flushed, blush, flush, purple, rouge), избухвам (blaze, blow, blow up, break forth, burst out, erupt, explode, flash, fly into a rage, fulminate, go off the deep end, lose one's temper, pop off), плам (ardour, fervency, fervor, fervour), пламенност (ardour, eagerness, impetuosity), пламвам (burn up, catch fire, flame, flame up, flare, flare up, flush, kindle, take, turn scarlet), паля (ignite, light, strike, switch on, turn on, turn over), пека (bake, broil, cook, grill, roast), печка (heater, stove), пожар (blaze), пожарен, блясък (blaze, brightness, brilliance, brilliancy, coruscation, dash, eclat, effulgence, flash, glamor, glamour, glance, glint, glitter, glory, gloss, glossiness, heraldry, illumination, irradiation, lambency, light, luminance, luminosity, luster, lustre, pageantry, polish, radiance, radiancy, refulgence, resplendence, resplendency, sheen, shine, sparkle, splendor, splendour), жар (ardour, embers, fervency, fervor, fervour, flame, ginger, glow, gusto, heat, incandescence, mustard, vehemence, violence, warmth, zest), изпъждам (dispossess, expel, oust, out, shoo, supplant, thrust forth), запалвам се (catch fire, enthuse, ignite, inflame, kindle, light, warm), суша (air, aridness, bake, drought, dry, earth, exsiccate, land, main, mainland, terra firma, weather), обстрелвам (pelt, pepper, play, pound, search), обстрелване (gunning, hammering, pelt), огън (blaze, flame, flush, flushing, ingle, light), вдъхновение (afflatus, inspiration), възпаление (inflammation, irritation), възторг (admiration, delight, ecstasy, elan, enthusiasm, exaltation, jubilance, rapture, ravishment, transport), говоря бързо като картечница, треска (ague, chip, cod, codfish, coding, fever, pyrexia, shiver, sliver, splint, the shakes), увлечение (abandon, abandonment, flame, gusto, mustard, penchant, relish, transport, vehemence, zeal, zest), уволнявам (boot, cast, discard, discharge, dismiss, dispense, drop, grass, lay off, muster out, release, relieve, remove, retire, sack, send away, separate, shelve, turn away), стрелба (field sports, firing, gunning, shoot, shooting, shot), стрелям (discharge, kill, loose, pop, pot, shoot), запалвам (enthuse, have a smoke, ignite, kick over, kindle, light, light up, start, start up, turn on, warm). (various references)

   

Catalan

  

foc. (various references)

   

Chinese 

  

. (various references)

   

Czech

  

topení (heating), naskoèit (hop on), oheò (blaze, flame), pálit (bake, bite, distil, hurt, smart, tingle), palba (firing), požár (blaze, conflagration), krb (fireplace, grate, hearth), střelba (firing, shooting), zapálit (blow in, electrify, enkindle, ignite, kindle, light, set fire, set fire to, set on fire), vyhodit (blow, cast out, dart off, eject, fling out, sack, throw, throw out, turf out), vyhodit z práce, vypálit (brand, burn down, burn out, cauterize, fire off), vypalovat (bake), vystřelit (fire away, let off, loose off, pop), vzplanout (flame up, flare up, fly into), střílet (plug, shoot). (various references)

   

Danish

  

skyde (shoot), ild (glow, heat, passion), afskedige (discharge, dismiss, sack). (various references)

   

Dutch

  

royeren (discharge, dismiss, sack), ontzetten (alarm, appal, appall, discharge, dismay, dismiss, puzzle, sack), ontslaan (discharge, dismiss, exempt, sack), brand (conflagration). (various references)

   

Esperanto

  

fajro, plivigligi (fan, inspire, stimulate, stir up, urge on), plifervorigi (cheer, inspire, stimulate), pafi (shoot), maldungi (discharge, dismiss, sack), malŝargi (discharge, fire off, let off), incendio (conflagration), eksigi (discharge, dismiss, sack), ekpafi (discharge, fire off). (various references)

   

Faeroese

  

skjóta (shoot), koyra frá (discharge, dismiss, sack), eldur. (various references)

   

Farsi 

  

حریق , حرارت (Ardor, Ginger, Heat, Impetuosity, Vehemence, Verve, Warmth, Zeal), تفنگ یاتوپ رااتش کردن , افروختن , انگیختن (Inanimate, Incite, Motive, Occasion, Stimulate, Urge), اتش زدن (Alight, Burn, Ignite), اتش (Light), بیرون کردن (Cashier, Dispossess, Evict, Force, Swap). (various references)

   

Finnish

  

tulipalo (conflagration), tuli (light). (various references)

   

French

  

tirer, incendie, feu. (various references)

   

Frisian

  

fjoer, sjitte (shoot), oanwakkereje (abet, fan, inspire, stimulate, stir up, urge), oanhysje (abet, cheer, encourage, excite, impel, incite, inspire, instigate, provoke, rouse, spur on, stimulate, stir up, urge), oanfjurje (abet, cheer, encourage, impel, inspire, instigate, rouse, spur on, stimulate, stir up, urge), oanfiterje (abet, cheer, encourage, impel, inspire, instigate, rouse, spur on, stimulate, stir up, urge), dien jaan (discharge, dismiss, sack), ôfsjitte (discharge, fire off, let off, shoot off), ôffjurje (discharge, fire off). (various references)

   

German

  

Feuer (Ardor, ardour, beacon, blaze, bonfire, fieriness, firing, flame, glitter, glow, heat, kick, light, mettle, passion, raciness, shooting, sparkle, spunk, vigor, vigour), schießen (gun, hit, jet, pot, punt, score, send, shoot, shoot away, shooting, sprout, spurt), feuern (fling, heat, light, sack, shoot, slam, sling), anfeuern (abet, agitate, chase, cheer on, drive, drive on, encourage, excite, fan, impel, inspire, light, root for, rouse, shoo, spur on, stimulate, stir up, urge, urge on), zünden (burn, catch, catch fire, catch light, detonate, firing, flash on, ignite, kindle, kindle enthusiasm, let off, light, set alight, set off, strike, take fire, to ignite), entlassen (ax, axe, cashier, demobilize, disband, disbanded, discharge, dismiss, dismissed, expel, free, lay off, let out, muster out, pension off, release, retire, sack, to disband, to dismiss, unburden), abschießen (discharge, fire off, kick off, knock out, launch, let off, loose off, pick off, shoot down, shoot in, shoot off, to bring down, to launch), abfeuern (discharge, fire off, firing, let off, loose off, pop, shoot off, to fire off). (various references)

   

Greek 

  

πυρκαγιά (blaze, conflagration), πυροβολώ (fire arm, shoot, shot), φωτιά. (various references)

   

Hebrew 

  

אש (conflagration, flame, glitter, heat, wrath). (various references)

   

Hungarian

  

tüzelés (firing, shooting), tûz (commence firing, ingle, pin, prick). (various references)

   

Icelandic

  

eldur. (various references)

   

Indonesian

  

menembak (shoot), memburakan (spew forth (water, spout, spray), membedil (use a rifle), gejolak (flaming, fluctuation, flush), bara (ember), api (blaze, flame, spirit). (various references)

   

Irish

  

tine. (various references)

   

Italian

  

fuoco (fireplace, flak, focus, heat, light), sparare (firing, go, go off, let off, score, shoot, shooting), incendio (blaze, burning, conflagration, gangrene). (various references)

   

Japanese Kanji 

  

砲火 (gunfire). (various references)

   

Japanese Katakana 

  

たきび (bonfire), ファイア , しゃげき (firing, gunshot, marksmanship, shooting), ひのて (blaze, flames), (blaze, consort, cost, day, expense, faulty-, flame, hail, ice, light, negation, no, non-, princess, proportion, ratio, rook, spoon, sun, sunlight, sunshine, the noes, wicked person), ほうか (arson, beacon, gunfire, Japanese money, law department or law school, legal currency, loud singing, one's country, rocket, set fire to, signal fire), せん (at length, attentively, beam, before, boastfully usurping, boil down, broil, carefully, choice, clip, compilation, cork, deeply, editing, former, gland, hermit, hundredth of a yen, late, line, old, parch, precedence, previous, priority, profoundly, roast, selection, snip, stopcock, stopper, the future, thousand, wire, wizard), かさい (conflagration, family court, fruits and vegetables), かじ (blacksmith, Chinese character, conflagration, domestic chores, faith-healing, helm, housework, incantation, rudder, summertime), かき (fence, firearms, flower vase, flowering plants, flowering season, guns, oyster, oyster shell, persimmon, summer season, the following). (various references)

   

Korean 

  

. (various references)

   

Lombard

  

foeugh. (various references)

   

Malay

  

api. (various references)

   

Manx

  

lostey (ablaze, aflame, alight, alight set, burn, burn away, burn up, combustion, cremate, cremation, deflagration, fire away, fire-raising, incinerate), lhiggey (act, act pretend, allow, broach, delay, discharge, firing, go off, heave, ignore, let, let down, let off, letting, level, loose, permission, permit, pierce, remission, shoot, shoot up, shooting, slip, suffer, water pipe), lhieggey (bowl over, cataract, chop down, demolish, dismount, downfall, drop, fall, fall down, fell, hew, overbalance, overflow, pick off, pull down, run over, spill, strike, striking, throw, topple, tumble, weigh down), cur aile da (bake as bricks, burn), aile. (various references)

   

Maya

  

hooch (fire ant, to faint). (various references)

   

Norwegian

  

ild. (various references)

   

Occitan

  

fuèc, encendi. (various references)

   

Papiamen

  

kandela. (various references)

   

Pig Latin

  

irefay.(various references)

   

Polish

  

strzelać (shoot), ogień. (various references)

   

Portuguese

  

incêndio (burning, conflagration), fogo (conflagration, firing, flame, range, stove). (various references)

   

Portuguese Brazilian

  

incêndio. (various references)

   

Romanian

  

împuşca (bag, execute, gun, pip, pistol, pop, pot, rifle, shoot). (various references)

   

Romany

  

yak. (various references)

   

Russian 

  

стрельба (firing, gunning, shooting, shootings), стрелять огонь;пожар;обстрел пожарный, разжигать (fan, inflame, kindle, quicken, whip up), воспламенять (enkindle, ignite, inflame, kindle, prime), воодушевление (animation, inspiriting, lift), огонь (devouring element, direct fire, direct laying fire, light, lights, live wire), обстрел (gunning), зажигать (enkindle, ignite, kindle, light), жар (broil, fervour, fever, glow, heat), лихорадка (ague, fever, shaking), пыл (ardor, ardors, ardour, eagerness, elan, fervency, fervor, fervour, flame, glow, metal, mettle, spunk, verve), пожар (conflagration), пламя (blaze, flame). (various references)

   

Scottish

  

teine. (various references)

   

Serbo-Croatian

  

zasuti (bestrew, fill in, overwhelm, pour, shower), vatra (gunfire, light, passion), udar (blow, impact, jerk, knock, shock, smack, strike, stroke, thrust), raspaliti (inflame, whip up), pucati (plop, plug, shoot), pući (break, burst, bust up, click, crack, give way to, pop, pop off, rupture, snap), podstaći (abet, enforce, exhort, foment, galvanize, goad, incite to, induce, instigate, pique, spark, stir, stoke, whet), požar (blaze, conflagration, wildfire), paljba (commencement, salvo, volley), paliti (light, set fire, start), otpustiti (depressurize, discharge, dismiss, lay off, release, send away, turn off), opaliti (belt, burn, discharge, go off), oganj (flame, ingle). (various references)

   

Spanish

  

fuego (blaze, fireplace, hearth, lava, light), incendio (burning, conflagration), tirar (burn, cast, discard, dispose of, drag, draw, draw out, haul, heave, kiss off, knock off, lay, pitch, print, pull, shoot, tell off, throw, throw about, throw aside, throw away, throw out, to throw, toss away, toss over, tug, turn out), incitar (abet, cheer, encourage, fan, impel, incite, inciter, inspire, instigate, provoke, put up, rouse, spur on, stimulate, stir, stir up, urge, urge on), disparar (discharge, gun, let off, loose off, play on, release, shoot), despedir (abrogate, discard, discharge, dismiss, eject, give notice, give off, give out, order off, pay off, release, sack, see out, send off, send out, shoot off, shoot out, stand off, throw, throw off, throw out, turn away), animar (abet, animate, brighten up, brisk, buck up, cheer, embolden, encourage, enliven, fan, hearten, impel, inspire, inspirit, instigate, jazz, lift, liven, liven up, pep up, perk up, pull for, reman, rouse, spur on, stimulate, stir up, urge, urge on). (various references)

   

Sranan

  

faya (hot), sutu (shoot). (various references)

   

Swahili

  

moto. (various references)

   

Swazi

  

um-lilo. (various references)

   

Swedish

  

eld (Ardor, ardour, enthusiasm, flame, light, spirit), brand (canker, conflagration, gangrene, mildew), skjuta (pop, push, send, shoot, shove, slide, work), brasa. (various references)

   

Tagalog

  

súnog, apóy (flame). (various references)

   

Thai

  

เพลิง, เติมเชื้อเพลิง, ไล่ออก, การยิงปืนพร้อมๆกัน, ยิง (gun), ปลุกเร้า, ความกระตือรือร้น (eagerness, earnestness, energy, enthusiasm), จุดไฟ (kindle, light). (various references)

   

Turkish

  

işten çıkarmak (decapitate, discharge, dismiss, give smb. the gate, lay off, turn off), ısıtmak (give a warm, heat, heat up, hot, hot up, toast, warm, warm up), çalışmak (aim, aim at, behave, catch, endeavor, endeavour, function, labor, labour, operate, practice, practise, serve, start, start up, struggle, study, try, work), alev (blaze, flame, pennant, spunk), alev almak (burn, catch fire, deflagrate, flame), ateş (blaze, fever, flush, heat, mettle, pyro-, temperature), ateş almak (catch fire, go off, ignite, kindle), ateş etme (firing, pop, shoot), ateşlemek (discharge, ignite, let fly, let off, loose, loose off, pop, set off, spark, touch off), atex (ague, fever), ısıtıcı (heater, space heater, warmer), heyecan (affect, agitation, animation, Ardor, ardour, bang, commotion, dither, drama, emotion, enthusiasm, exaltation, excitement, ferment, fermentation, fever, flap, flurry, flush, flutter, furor, furore, glow, kick, pucker, razzle-dazzle, rhapsody, ruffle, sensation, shiver, spice, spring tide, stir, taking, tension, the shivers, thrill, tingle, twitter, vibes, vibration, wallop, warmth, yeast), yanmak (be hot, broil, burn, burn out, fuse, fuze, glow, go on, inflame, kindle, light, light up, scorch, smart, sting, swelter, take, tan, toast), işten atmak (discharge, dismiss, give smb. the chuck, give smb. the push, give the sack, sack), işten kovmak (axe, discharge, dismiss), kovmak (ax, axe, banish, boot, bounce, can, cashier, cast out, chuck out, dislodge, dismiss, drive away, drive out, eject, elbow out, elbow smb. out, exclude, exile, expel, fend off, get rid of, give smb. the bag, give smb. the chuck, give smb. the gate, give smb. the push, give the sack, kick out, make a clean sweep of, order away, order out, out, pack off, repulse, sack, send away, shoo, shoo away, show out, show smb. the door, show the door, turf out, turn away, turn out), ocak (cooker, fireplace, furnace, grate, hearth, Jan, January, oven, range, seed plot, seedbed, stove), soru yağmuruna tutmak (assail smb. with questions, heckle), soruvermek, tutuşturmak (deflagrate, enkindle, ignite, kindle, set on fire), yakmak (bite, burn, cauterize, flash, ignite, incinerate, kindle, light, light up, put on, scathe, scorch, sear, set on fire, turn on), yangın (blaze), hırs (ambition, anger, avidity, cupidity, desire, forwardness, glow, greed, greediness, mammon, mettle, passion, rage, rapaciousness, rapacity, voracity). (various references)

   

Turkmen 

  

ot (grass), lorsuldamak, kowmak (dismiss). (various references)

   

Ukrainian

  

стрільба (firing, shooting), вогонь (cannonade, shooting), надихати (animate, cheer, ensoul, imbue, inspire, inspirit, invigorate, lift, prepossess, spiritualize, warm), запалюватися (enkindle, ignite, inflame, light), запалювати (enkindle, fuze, ignite, inflame, kindle, light up, prime, spark), піч (cooker, furnace, heater, oven, stove), пожежа (blaze, wildfire), полум'я (blaze, flame). (various references)

   

Vietnamese 

  

sự vui vẻ hoạt bát sự xúc động mạnh mẽ, sự sốt sắng (stingo), sự hăng hái (ardour, burning, enthusiasm, impassionedness, keenness, mustard, snap, spirit, verve), nhiệt tình (animation, burning, devoted, devotedly, devout, impassionedness, mettle, mettled, mettlesome, spirit, verve, warm), nguồn cảm hứng, lửa, lừng danh (celebrated, far-famed), hoả hoạn, ánh lửa sự cháy. (various references)

   

Welsh

  

ufel, tanio (stoke), tân, ta+n, saethu (blast, dart, shoot). (various references)

   

Yucatec

  

k'aak'. (various references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various translation references.

Top     

Ancestral Language Translations: Fire

LanguagePeriodTranslations
Sumerian3100 BCE-2500 BCE

izi, ne-mur, nu. (various references)

Latin500 BCE-Modern

ardor, ardore, ardorem, ardoribus, ardoris, conburam, conburatur, conburebant, conburendos, conburendum, conburens, conburent, conburentem, conburentes, conburentur, conbureret, conbureris, conbures, conburet, conburetis, conburetque, conburetur, conburit, conburite, conburuntur, conbuserat, conbuserit, conbuserunt, conbusi, conbusisti, conbusit, conbusta, conbustae, conbusti, conbustum, deponam, depone, deponebamus, deponendum, deponens, deponent, deponentes, deponere, deponerent, deponeretur, deponet, deponite, deposita, depositis, depositoque, depositos, depositum, depositumque, deposuerant, deposuerunt, deposuisti, deposuit, facem, faces, facibus, facis, fax, flamma, igne, ignem, ignemque, igneque, igni, ignis, ignium, incendia, incendii, incendio, incendium, vatilla. (various references)

Avestan200-600

âtar. (various references)

Old English450-1100

brond, bryne, lig. (various references)

Middle English1100-1500

fier. (various references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

Top     

Bible Trace: Fire

LanguageDateSourceLuke Chapter 17, Verse 29
Greek (transliterated)250 BCSeptuagintH de hmera exhlqen lwt apo sodomwn ebrexen pur kai qeion ap ouranou kai apwlesen apantaV
Latin405VulgateQua die autem exiit Loth a Sodomis pluit ignem et sulphur de caelo et omnes perdidit
Old English990West SaxonSoðlice on þam dæge þe loð eode of sodoma hyt rinde fyr and swefl of heofone: and ealle forspilde;
Middle English1395WyclifThe Lord reynede fier and brymstoon fro heuene, and loste alle.
Renaissance English1526TyndaleAnd even the same daye that Lot went out of Zodom it rayned fyre and brymstone from heven and destroyed them all.
Jacobean English1611King JamesBut the same day that Lot went out of Sodom it rained fire and brimstone from heaven, and destroyed them all.
Victorian English1833WebsterBut the same day that Lot went out of Sodom, it rained fire and brimstone from heaven, and destroyed them all:
Basic English1964OgdenBut on the day when Lot went out of Sodom, fire came down from heaven and destruction came on them all.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

Top     

Matched Bible Translations: Fire

LanguageLuke Chapter 17, Verse 29
Cebuanoapan sa adlaw sa pagpahawa ni Lot sa Sodoma, gikan sa langit miulan ang kalayo ug asupri ug niini gilaglag silang tanan--
Chinese到 羅 得 出 所 多 瑪 的 那 日 、 就 有 火 與 硫 磺 從 天 上 降 下 來 、 把 他 們 全 都 滅 了 。
CroatianA onog dana kad Lot iziðe iz Sodome, zapljušti s neba oganj i sumpor i sve uništi.
Danishmen på den Dag, da Loth gik ud af Sodoma, regnede Ild og Svovl ned fra Himmelen og ødelagde dem alle:
DutchMaar op den dag, op welken Lot van Sodom uitging, regende het vuur en sulfer van den hemel, en verdierf ze allen.
Finnishmutta sinä päivänä, jona Loot lähti Sodomasta, satoi tulta ja tulikiveä taivaasta, ja se hukutti heidät kaikki,
Germanan dem Tage aber, da Lot aus Sodom ging, da regnete es Feuer und Schwefel vom Himmel und brachte sie alle um.
Indonesian-Bahasa Sehari-hariTetapi ketika Lot keluar dari Sodom, pada hari itu api dan belerang turun dari langit dan membinasakan mereka semua.
Indonesian-Terjemahan Lamatetapi pada hari Lut keluar dari Sodom itu, turunlah hujan api dan belerang dari langit membinasakan sekaliannya;
LatvianBet tai dienâ, kad Lats izgâja no Sodomas, lija uguns un sçrs no debesîm un iznîcinâja visus.
MaoriHeoi i te ra i puta mai ai a Rota i Horoma, ka uaina he kapura, he whanariki i te rangi, na whakangaromia katoatia ratou.
Norwegianmen den dag da Lot gikk ut av Sodoma, da lot Gud ild og svovel regne fra himmelen og ødela dem alle sammen -
Rumaniandar, kn ziua cknd a iewit Lot din Sodoma, a plouat foc wi pucioasq din cer, wi i -a pierdut pe toyi.
RussianОП Ч ДЕОШ, Ч ЛПФПТЩК мПФ ЧЩЫЕМ ЙЪ уПДПНБ, РТПМЙМУС У ОЕВБ ДПЦДШ ПЗОЕООЩК Й УЕТОЩК Й ЙУФТЕВЙМ ЧУЕИ;
ShuarTura Raut Sutuma péprunmaya jiinkimtai asupri tutai kaya keek Yútana aintsan nayaimpinmaya kakeetuk nu aentsun mash Máawarmiayi.
SwahiliLakini siku ile Loti alipoondoka Sodoma, moto na kiberiti vikanyesha kama mvua kutoka mbinguni na kuwaangamiza wote.
Swedishmen på den dag då Lot gick ut från Sodom regnade eld och svavel ned från himmelen och förgjorde dem allasammans,
UmaNtaa' palai-na Lot ngkai Sodom, hompo-mi apu pai' watu to morea' ngkai langi' mpopatehi-ra omea.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

Top     

Derivations & Misspellings: Fire

Derivations

Words beginning with "fire": fireable, firearm, firearms, fireback, firebacks, fireball, fireballer, fireballers, fireballing, fireballs, firebase, firebases, firebird, firebirds, fireboat, fireboats, firebomb, firebombed, firebombing, firebombs, firebox, fireboxes, firebrand, firebrands, firebrat, firebrats, firebreak, firebreaks, firebrick, firebricks, firebug, firebugs, fireclay, fireclays, firecracker, firecrackers, fired, firedamp, firedamps, firedog, firedogs, firedrake, firedrakes, firefang, firefanged, firefanging, firefangs, firefight, firefighter, firefighters, firefighting. (additional references)

Words ending with "fire": afire, backfire, balefire, bonfire, brushfire, bushfire, campfire, ceasefire, counterfire, crossfire, drumfire, foxfire, gunfire, hangfire, hellfire, misfire, outfire, postfire, prefire, refire, retrofire, rimfire, shellfire, spitfire, surefire, wildfire. (additional references)

Words containing "fire": backfired, backfires, balefires, bonfires, brushfires, bushfires, campfires, ceasefires, counterfired, counterfires, crossfires, drumfires, foxfires, gunfires, hangfires, hellfires, misfired, misfires, outfired, outfires, prefired, prefires, refired, refires, retrofired, retrofires, rimfires, shellfires, spitfires, unfired, wildfires. (additional references)


Misspellings

"Fire" is suggested in spellcheckers for the following: fabre, faer, fairen, fara, farbe, faree, farew, Farge, fari, farie, farje, Farre, farte, farve, favre, fayre, Fbie, feare, feer, feier, feira, feire, feirey, feirie, feore, fera, ferde, Fere, feren, ferf, Ferge, feri, ferme, Fermee, ferne, feroe, Ferrea, ffree, ffrey, fibe, fibra, fice, Fidem, Fidra, fidrer, fieb, Fiee, fieh, fiek, fier, fiera, Fiere, fieree, fieri, fiero, fierre, fiew, fige, Figel, figr, figre, fiir, fike, Fikret, Fikri, filreg, fime, Fiora, fiore, firce, firee, firel, firen, fireo, firex, firey, firez, firge, firl, firn, Firoz, firr, firve, firy, firz, fise, fite, Fitr, fivre, fixe, fize, flire, flra, foie, foii, foire, foree, forei, forek, forel, foren, foreo, forep, forex, forje, forre, forve, forye, fre, frei, frex, friae, frib, frie, friej, friek, friem, Frige, frile, frio, frix, fuir, fure, furre, fyce, fyra, fyrde, fyre, fyro, fyrr, fyte, hfire, ifee, ifie, jire, Jireh, nire, ofire, oire, qire, zire. (additional references)

Source: compiled by the editor, based on several corpora (additional references).

Top     

Rhyming with "Fire"

# of Phoneme MatchesPronunciationWord(s) rhyming with "fire" (pronounced fī"er or fī"r)
3f ī" ermisfire.
2-ī" erdrier, dryer, Dyer, enquire, acquire, attire, briar, brier, buyer, choir, conspire, crier, desire, dire, entire, Eyer, flier, flyer, friar, frier, fryer, higher, hire, liar, mire, plier, prier, prior, pryer, require, retire, rewire, shier, sire, Spier, supplier, tire, transpire, Trier, tyer, wire.
3f ī" rafire.
2-ī" radmire, aspire, dire, expire, hire, inquire, inspire, ire, lyre, mire, perspire, quire, reacquire, rehire, require, retire, shire, spire, squire, tyre, wire.

Source: compiled by the editor (additional references); see credits.

Top     

Anagrams: Fire

Scrabble® Enable2K-Verified Anagrams

Direct Anagrams: reif, rife.

Words within the letters "e-f-i-r"

-1 letter: fer, fie, fir, ire, ref, rei, rif.

-2 letters: ef, er, if, re.

 Words containing the letters "e-f-i-r"
 

+1 letter: afire, brief, feria, fermi, fiber, fibre, fiery, fifer, filer, finer, fired, firer, fires, fiver, fixer, flier, fried, frier, fries, frise, grief, infer, kefir, lifer, refit, refix, reifs, reify, rifer, rifle, serif.

 

+2 letters: aerify, briefs, defier, differ, faerie, fainer, faired, fairer, farcie, feirie, feriae, ferial, ferias, ferine, ferity, ferlie, fermis, ferric, fervid, fiacre, fibber, fibers, fibres, fierce, fifers, figure, filers, filler, filmer, filter, finder, finery, finger, firers, firmed, firmer, fisher, fitter, fivers, fixers, fixure, fizzer, fliers, foxier, fozier, fraise, fridge, friend, friers, frieze, fringe, frisee, frises, frized, frizer, frizes, fumier, furies, griefs, griffe, heifer, iffier, infare, infers, ireful, kefirs, knifer, liefer, lifers, lifter, niffer, pilfer, prefix, redfin, refile, refill, refilm, refind, refine, refire, refits, relief, resift, rifely, rifest, riffed, riffle, rifled, rifler, rifles, rifted, serifs, sherif, sifter, strife, titfer, trifle, verify.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro.

Top     



INDEX

1. Definition
2. Synonyms
3. Crosswords
4. Usage: Modern
5. Usage: Commercial
6. Images: Slideshow
7. Images: Photo Album
8. Images: Digital Art
9. Sounds
10. Quotations: Familiar
11. Quotations: Historic
12. Quotations: Fiction
13. Quotations: Non-fiction
14. Quotations: Spoken
15. Quotations: Speeches
16. Usage Frequency
17. Names: Frequency
18. Names: Derived from
19. Names: Company Usage
20. Expressions
21. Expressions: Internet
22. Translations: Modern
23. Translations: Ancient
24. Bible Trace
25. Abbreviations
26. Acronyms
27. Derivations
28. Rhymes
29. Anagrams
30. Bibliography


  

Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.