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"blazed out" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
You can use it to mean a rapid release of sound, light, or color. For example, "The fireworks blazed out in a spectacular display of color."
Exact(21)
Although singer/guitarist Ben Hozie and pals had something of a false start as the short-lived agit-pranksters Bodega Bay, the revamped band have certainly blazed out from the traps.
Certainly Mr. Ford's show on Monday night had shock value, as fat Surrealist lips now blazed out as shiny shoe buckles, or in a meaner variation, plainly meant to evoke a vagina, as slits in frosted lavender dresses.
Inside the centre, shortly before the start, Coldplay's Clocks blazed out with portentous intent ("Lights go out and I can't be saved/Tides that I tried to swim against/Brought me down upon my knees").
Amid extraordinary scenes at ExCeL, Joshua blazed out for the final round against Italy's reigning champion Roberto Cammarelle, and after the pair had exchanged bombs for three minutes, the decision for Joshua - after an 18-18 draw - brought the house down.
This is one of the most tightly constructed movements ever composed, with 30 variations (and a concluding coda) on the melody you hear blazed out at the beginning in the brass and woodwind; that melody is part of the texture of every single succeeding variation, as the passacaglia form demands.
A river in Picenum ran the colour of blood, in Etruria a good part of the p47 heavens seemed to be on fire, at Ariminum a light like the day blazed out at night, in many portions of Italy three moons became visible in the night time, and in the Forum a vulture perched for several days.
Similar(39)
Or, "I want sex to pierce reality and come blazing out the other side".
If a Ferrari comes blazing out of that bus and we score first, it will be a totally different game".
The music grooves as hard as any of its sources, as unknown singers and soloists blaze out of every track.
Whether to blaze out – trumpets to Eryri – Or to go down with final rampage – Why not (b)?
It is far easier, she suggests, to find "some Emily Brontë who dashed her brains out on the moor" than one who "blazes out" of obscurity.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com