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The phrase "Burst into fire" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used to describe something suddenly igniting or catching fire. Example: "The old building was so dry that it seemed to burst into fire at the slightest spark."
Exact(5)
Then, around 9 45, the ground shifted and cracked open a three-inch gas pipe, causing escaping gas to burst into fire, sending a two-story-high torch of yellow-orange flame billowing past the street lights.
The defendants included technicians, government inspectors and representatives of companies who installed or operated equipment on a funicular rail car that burst into fire in a tunnel at Kaprun ski resort, south of Salzburg.
Among the highlights were an imperious solo by Ms. Santana, a solo for Mr. Reyes in which his feet made fierce declamations and a duet for Ms. Filgueiras and Mr. Calvo de Mora that began tenderly, then burst into fire.
Three songs were released as singles: "Scream Aim Fire", "Hearts Burst into Fire", and "Waking the Demon".
Her voice is certainly powerful, and you can tell there's a spark in her belly which is soon about to burst into fire, but for now the embers of vulnerability still glow amid the dysphoria and heartache.
Similar(55)
So, living a life where you keep compromising your values, is like a small flame that will eventually burst into a fire, and you'll be the first one to get burned.
One of the special strengths of Thank You, Anarchy, Nathan Schneider's new book about Occupy Wall Street, is its account of the many people who prepared the fire that burst into flame on September 17, 2011, in lower Manhattan, and that still gives light and heat to many of us.
Here's the moment the burning semi truck burst into a fire ball.
So this is the plot: A cheap CGI approximation of Stonehenge has gone mad and thrown out a cheap CGI approximation of an electromagnetic pulse that has made some tourists burst into purple fire (see above).
The Washington Post checks with model-airplane enthusiasts, who confirm that, yep, lithium-ion batteries quite often burst into "spectacular fires".
In one of the most serious, an oil tanker collided with another vessel in 1994, resulting in the death of 28 seamen and a 15,000-ton oil spillage that burst into a spectacular fire.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com