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to torch
noun
A stick with a flame on one end, used chiefly as a light source; a similarly shaped implement with a replaceable supply of flammable material.
Exact(59)
Music ranges from opera to torch songs to Top 40.
Indiana decided to torch them instead from the outside.
Phelps welcomed that little prod, like Michael Jordan trying to torch the Knicks.
His music roams the Southland from Tex-Mex to torch song to New Orleans mambo.
An order for onion soup came in with a request to "torch and nuke it".
The easiest way to clear the land is to torch it.
Huge cheers erupted when a failed attempt was made to torch the apartheid South African embassy.
It would leave high school science students without something to torch, dissolve or toss out the window.
And possibly full of subliminal messages, too, although I've yet to torch a shopping centre immediately after watching.
It provided the records last year to Torch Concepts for a research project on "airline passenger risk assessment".
There were 2 million blooms from dogwood from N.J. to Torch ginger and birds of paradise out of Hawaii.
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