flame
burning gas or vapor, as from wood or coal, that is undergoing combustion; a portion of ignited gas or vapor.
Often flames . the state or condition of blazing combustion: to burst into flames.
any flamelike condition; glow; inflamed condition.
brilliant light; scintillating luster.
bright coloring; a streak or patch of color.
intense ardor, zeal, or passion.
Informal. an object of one's passionate love; sweetheart: He's taking out his new flame tonight.
Computer Slang. an angry, critical, or disparaging electronic message, as an online comment.
to burn with a flame or flames; burst into flames; blaze.
to glow like flame; shine brilliantly; flash.
to burn or burst forth with strong emotion; break into open anger, indignation, etc.
Computer Slang. to post an angry, critical, or disparaging electronic message, as an online comment.
to subject to the action of flame or fire.
to flambé.
Computer Slang. to insult or criticize angrily in an online post or comment.
flame out,
(of a jet engine) to cease to function due to an interruption of the fuel supply or to faulty combustion.
to burst out in or as if in flames.
Origin of flame
1synonym study For flame
Other words for flame
Other words from flame
- flamer, noun
- flameless, adjective
- flamelike, adjective
- outflame, verb (used with object), out·flamed, out·flam·ing.
- pre·flame, adjective
- un·der·flame, noun
Words Nearby flame
Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2024
How to use flame in a sentence
We used it to prepare a few rib eyes, and the virtual temperature controls were helpful to get just the right amount of heat and flame out of our wood.
5 Portable Grills for All Your Outdoor Cooking Needs | Amy Marturana Winderl | September 2, 2020 | Outside OnlineStoichiometric flames are the Goldilocks variety, with just the right amount of fuel for complete combustion.
Four types of flames join forces to make this eerie ‘blue whirl’ | Emily Conover | August 12, 2020 | Science NewsReplacing the flammable liquid in lithium-ion batteries would tame their risk of flame.
The latter, however, was successful in mitigating the danger by putting out the flames.
Know Your Historical Warships: From 7th Century BC – 17th Century AD | Dattatreya Mandal | April 4, 2020 | Realm of HistoryLaunching rice and its fixings allows a chef to cook it over really hot flames without burning.
There’s science to making great fried rice | Emily Conover | March 4, 2020 | Science News For Students
Hatuey asked the religious man holding the flame if indeed any Christians were in heaven.
The Life and Hard Times Of The Family A Cuban Defector Left Behind | Brin-Jonathan Butler | December 19, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTAn orange blossom of flame exploded on our screens as a new reality dawned.
What if it was the divine being who was a symbol for the original object of worship: the flame?
That is, until a rough-tongued Scotsman rekindled the flame.
According to their friend, producer/filmmaker Choke No Joke, it was over a mutual flame.
Like many another cavalier, he had a flame in every country, or rather, in every town which he visited.
Napoleon's Marshals | R. P. Dunn-PattisonThe very soil in which it grew must be burned out with the flame of avenging justice.
The Unsolved Riddle of Social Justice | Stephen LeacockThe bushes seemed to burst into smoke and flame, and then came a crashing volley in return.
The Courier of the Ozarks | Byron A. DunnA fiery intensity of light lay over it, as though any moment it must burst into sheets of flame.
The Wave | Algernon BlackwoodIt is very combustible, burns with a pale blue flame, and is converted into water.
Elements of Agricultural Chemistry | Thomas Anderson
British Dictionary definitions for flame
/ (fleɪm) /
a hot usually luminous body of burning gas often containing small incandescent particles, typically emanating in flickering streams from burning material or produced by a jet of ignited gas
(often plural) the state or condition of burning with flames: to burst into flames
a brilliant light; fiery glow
a strong reddish-orange colour
(as adjective): a flame carpet
intense passion or ardour; burning emotion
informal a lover or sweetheart (esp in the phrase an old flame)
informal an abusive message sent by electronic mail, esp to express anger or criticism of an internet user
to burn or cause to burn brightly; give off or cause to give off flame
(intr) to burn or glow as if with fire; become red or fiery: his face flamed with anger
(intr) to show great emotion; become angry or excited
(tr) to apply a flame to (something)
(tr) archaic to set on fire, either physically or with emotion
informal to send an abusive message by electronic mail
Origin of flame
1- See also flameout
Derived forms of flame
- flamer, noun
- flameless, adjective
- flamelet, noun
- flamelike, adjective
- flamy, adjective
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Scientific definitions for flame
[ flām ]
The hot, glowing mixture of burning gases and tiny particles that arises from combustion. Flames get their light either from the fluorescence of molecules or ions that have become excited, or from the incandescence of solid particles involved in the combustion process, such as the carbon particles from a candle.
The American Heritage® Science Dictionary Copyright © 2011. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
Other Idioms and Phrases with flame
see add fuel to the fire (flames); burst into (flames); fan the flames; go up in flames; shoot down (in flames).
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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