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Discover Ludwig"flames shot" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It typically refers to a sudden eruption of flames or fire. For example, you could use the phrase in a sentence like "The fireplace roared and flames shot up into the night sky."
Exact(54)
Flames shot up from buildings and pistol shots rang out as rival gangs of looters toughed it out.
"Flames shot more than two stories high.
Flames shot into the air.
Flames shot through the house.
Huge flames shot into the air.
Flames shot up from Tsinghua's bases.
Similar(6)
When Giteau converted from the paint, the crowd was up and welts of yellow flame shot skywards.
One of the neighbors, Intazar Ali Dar, 55, said that at one point the windows of the home exploded and jets of flame shot from the openings.
But it is the film's visual style that is most likely to offend the keepers of the Gipper's flame: shot mostly in darkly lit interiors and small, enclosed spaces like hospital rooms, elevators and the presidential bedroom, the film denies Mr. Reagan the Mount Rushmore-John Ford grandeur that his image-makers worked so hard to project.
For one unforgettable moment a flame shot across her countenance and she seemed to stir to life.
In "Iron-Rolling Mill (Modern Cyclops)" he created one of the grand political protest pictures of its day, with a hellish image of industry and its labor conditions engulfed in a flame-shot darkness.
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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