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flaming
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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See also: Flaming
English
Pronunciation
Adjective
flaming (comparative more flaming, superlative most flaming)
- On fire with visible flames.
- The flaming debris kept the firefighter well back, and the sparks threatened the neighborhood.
- 2011, Stephanie Owen Reeder, Amazing Grace: An Adventure at Sea, page 76:
- On Christmas Day, the pudding was served piping hot, with flaming brandy on top.
- Very bright and the color of flame.
- 1994, J.A. Jance, Death of a Snowbird:
- In the evening she reveled in the flaming sunsets, with their spectacular orange glows that seemed to set the whole world on fire.
- 2014, M. A. Meadowcroft -, The Windsurf Girl: A story of intrigue, avarice and romance, →ISBN, page 135:
- Edward was twelve when he had seen his first painting by Titian of a woman with flowing red locks. Since that day, he had always wanted to find a model he could paint who possessed the flaming hair that was Titian's trademark.
- 2014, Robert Barr, The Strong Arm: And Other Stories, →ISBN, page 323:
- The sun had not yet risen, but the splendour in the East, lighting the sky with wondrous colourings of gold and crimson and green, announced the speedy coming of that god which many of the inhabitants of Baalbek still worshipped. The temples and palaces of the city took their tints from the flaming sky, and Haziddin, the ambassador, thought he had never seen anything so beautiful, notwithstanding the eulogy Mahomet himself had pronounced upon his own metropolis of Damascus.
- (colloquial, typically of a gay man) Extremely obvious; visibly evident.
- To call him a flaming homosexual would be an understatement, but I think he acts that way just to see people react.
- (British, Australia, colloquial) Damned, bloody.
- I wasted three hours in that flaming traffic jam!
- Very enthusiastic or passionate.
- I hate it with a flaming passion!
- 1847 January – 1848 July, William Makepeace Thackeray, Vanity Fair […], London: Bradbury and Evans […], published 1848, →OCLC:
- Before he had brought it into the study that morning, he had read in the journal a flaming account of "Festivities at Gaunt House," with the names of all the distinguished personages invited by the Marquis of Steyne to meet his Royal Highness.
Derived terms
Translations
On fire with visible flames
|
Damned, bloody
Verb
flaming
- present participle and gerund of flame
Noun
flaming (plural flamings)
- An emission or application of fire; act of burning with flames.
- 1950, Market Growers Journal, volume 79, page 12:
- The burning is done before the crop has come up, and usually two flamings are necessary to kill all weeds […]
- Sterilization by holding an object in a hot flame.
- (Internet slang) Vitriolic criticism.
- You can expect a flaming if you post irrelevant spam to a newsgroup.
See also
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Polish
Etymology
Internationalism; compare English flamingo, German Flamingo, Russian флами́нго (flamíngo), ultimately from Portuguese flamingo.
Pronunciation
Noun
flaming m animal
- flamingo (any wading bird of the family Phoenicopteridae)
- Synonym: czerwonak
Declension
Declension of flaming
Further reading
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Romanian
Noun
flaming m (plural flamingi)
Declension
References
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