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I got burned up, got caught in a fire, got skin grafts.
"I'm also aware that she got burned up in a fire, so there's not a lot of likelihood that she will come back".
The original costumes got burned up in a fire that broke out on Labor Day, and the local costumers didn't have replacements on hand.
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ghost pepper, and a Trinidad Scorpion into the office this week, and sent out a mass e-mail daring my colleagues to try them, about two dozen people gathered around the peppers, some game to tentatively pop slivers into their mouths, most willing only to watch and share stories of times they got "burnt up," a term chiliheads sometimes use to describe the bodily sensation of eating chilis.
"That's when a bullpen can get burned up".
"It's not very far from the second floor, and it's better to break an arm or a leg than get burned up".
In an instant, our shaky courtroom sketch of Pearl the flighty young mother, Pearl the drunk, gets burned up and eclipsed by Pearl the mystic.
Ford takes a practical approach to his materials: the notebooks that went towards the making of Frank are stored in his freezer "in case the house burns down, then they won't get burned up".
An estimated $5 billion worth of prescription medication gets burned up, flushed down the drain, or thrown in the garbage each year.
He got trapped against a creek and said he thought he "was going to get burned up" by the 8-to-10-foot-high flames.
Getting burnt up can happen by accident (underestimation, misidentification) or on purpose (dares, pranks, curry).
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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