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The phrase "bonfire by" is not correct or usable in written English
If you would like to use the phrase "bonfire" in written English, you could say "a bonfire was lit by the lake".
Exact(12)
Love's Bonfire by Tom Paulin (Faber).
Late at night, at a bonfire by a lake, we lit them — tiny handheld fireworks — and shrieked and flailed our arms.
Ms Beckett said Hizbullah fighters had poured "petrol on the bonfire" by kidnapping Israeli soldiers and firing rockets into the country.
But it was no good: 12 hours of living hell followed, culminating in Meadows finding himself at a bonfire by a river "with a load of goths".
If reports of his inability to exit Television Centre due to the possibility of being captured and sat atop a large bonfire by a mob of angry protesters are to be believed, Nick Griffin could have done with the Stig after his laughable TV debut.
The culmination of the week is a torchlit procession to a bonfire by the sea.
Similar(48)
Bonfires, by nature, are very unpredictable.
Throughout the week, Aboukir Bay was surrounded by bonfires lit by Bedouin tribesmen in celebration of the British victory.
He had been singed in a media bonfire sparked by trivia and fanned into flame by culture-war-mongering.
He'd have a bonfire down by the cornfields at the bottom of his garden and quote Tennyson.
Eight police officers have been injured overnight after being attacked at a bonfire organised by dissident republicans in west Belfast.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com