Dictionary
Blaze a trail
verb
To show the way or proceed rapidly.
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Blaze a trail, because if you don't, who will?
The Dunlop deal could blaze a trail.
With cash in hand and new ideas, Britain has a rare chance to blaze a trail.
With so many advancements happening across UK campuses HE institutions can blaze a trail, Ceranic concludes.
Or he could blaze a trail as unique as his first name, remaining in Colorado.
Sadly for Greece, it would need to blaze a trail to repair its finances while also dodging default and devaluation.
So I think there's some correlation between maybe being the eldest and wanting to blaze a trail.
In 1971, a teenager called Andrew Matheson from Gillingham, Kent, arrived in London to blaze a trail.
Vogt said she wants to blaze a trail for others from her small Alpine nation to follow.
Last month, he ran fast enough to meet the Olympic qualifying standard, and now he will blaze a trail.
Indeed, many guests even became habitués in order to blaze a trail with reckless abandon seven days a week.
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