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Discover LudwigThe phrase "fire ablaze" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is usually used to describe a fire that is burning brightly and intensely. For example, "The sun set over the horizon, leaving the forest fire ablaze."
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And if the $45,000 he paid to one accuser for her silence is any indicator of what really happened, I'd say where there's smoke there's generally a fire ablaze... Do you have information you want to share with HuffPost?
It was Lee's self-absorption, immaturity and carelessness — leaving three small children, including an infant, and his exhausted wife alone in the house in the middle of the night with an untended fire ablaze in the fireplace — that led to his lifelong heartache.
Similar(56)
A CULINARY fire is ablaze in Huntington Village, where three impressive restaurants have opened recently.
Fear the Walking Dead leaves fire: Los Angeles ablaze, fighter jets dropping bombs to no avail.
The recently launched Euryalus was laying alongside this wharf, and the fire set ablaze the teak wood sheathing of the cruiser.
What she doesn't know is that he's risking his life every day by fighting oil well fires set ablaze by Islamic State fighters as they fled Qayyarah, about 40 miles south of Mosul.
What she doesn't know is that he's risking his life every day by fighting oil well fires set ablaze by Islamic State fighters as they fled Qayyarah, 60km south of Mosul.
Hope said she saw a parkade on fire and cars ablaze.
I passed tree trunks blackened and warped by last year's fire, and fields ablaze with newly blooming poppies.
Video footage released on YouTube shows the checkpoint coming under mortar fire before setting ablaze.
Vehicles were set ablaze, fires were lit on the sidewalks, and late at night a bank caught fire.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com