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Discover LudwigThe phrase "free fire" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe a military or combat situation in which soldiers are allowed to open fire without restraint or without being given a specific target. Example: During the intense battle, the commander gave the order for "free fire," allowing the soldiers to shoot at any enemy within their range without waiting for further instructions.
Exact(21)
Closing proceedings is Ben Wheatley's crime drama Free Fire.
Free Fire is set in Boston in 1978.
If the government decided to distribute free fire extinguishers, surely it should not skip over mosques and monasteries.
His latest, Free Fire, eschews the strangeness of his previous work and makes a bold bid for a wider audience.
Free Fire Zones -- anything that moved, human or animal, could be killed -- were redlined on military maps.
10) Free Fire Ben Wheatley's new film, co-written with Amy Jump, is a move to something like a straight-ahead Hollywood thriller.
Similar(37)
His canvas pieces resemble L. L. Bean products gone awry: abbreviated, detail-free fire hoses, sleeping bags, collapsible bus shelters or tents, life vests, backpacks.
"It's a global free-fire zone".
It now looks more like a free-fire zone.
There's a multiplicity of actors, in a free-fire zone.
Led in fact, straight into a free-fire zone.
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