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Discover Ludwig"back fire" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is most often used in the context of unintended consequences of a plan or action that produce an opposite result than what was intended. For example, "The company's aggressive expansion plans back fired and had a negative impact on its stock price."
Dictionary
back fire
noun
A small, controlled fire set in the path of a larger uncontrolled fire, in order to limit the spread of the large fire by removing its fuel.
Exact(23)
Big windows overlooked the neighbors' back fire escapes.
He woke up and sat outside on the back fire escape, smoking a cigarette.
In this regard, 10 photographs from the artists Allora and Calzadilla's "Back Fire" series seem pertinent.
Because of inherent difficulties in handling acetylene, technology has emphasized the utilization of acetylene by injection techniques to combat back fire in internal combustion engines.
Mr. Kunkel led the tour down a back fire escape to the second floor, where he said he knew some of the flophouse tenants.
In a color monitor, electron guns in the back fire electrons through a perforated metal sheet, called the shadow mask, and then onto a phosphor coating inside the C.R.T.
Similar(37)
"Ted came back fired up," Eason Jordan remembers.
We came back fired up.
Mrs. Keckley: Just the sound of a car back firing.
It's clearly time to bring back firing squads.
Back fires have higher fire intensities than head fires [ 20].
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com