flame
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
flame/fleɪm/
▶noun
- 1 a hot glowing body of ignited gas that is generated by something on fire.
- 2 a thing compared to a flame's ability to burn fiercely or be extinguished: the flame of hope.
- 3 a brilliant orange-red colour.
- 4 informal a vitriolic or abusive email or newsgroup posting, typically one sent in quick response to another.
- 1 give off flames.
■ set alight.
- 2 (of an intense emotion) appear suddenly and fiercely.
- 3 (of a person's face) become red with embarrassment or anger.
- 4 informal send an abusive email to.
- 5 (flame out) (of a jet engine) lose power through the extinction of the flame in the combustion chamber.
- 6 (flame out) informal, chiefly N. Amer. fail conspicuously.
– phrases
old flame informal a former lover.
old flame informal a former lover.
– derivatives
flameless adjective,
flamer noun (Computing, informal),
flamy (also flamey) adjective .
flameless adjective,
flamer noun (Computing, informal),
flamy (also flamey) adjective .
– origin ME: from OFr. flame (n.), flamer (v.), from L. flamma ‘a flame’.
'flame' also found in these Oxford entries:
acetylene
- anthracite
- bake
- Bengal light
- bituminous coal
- blowpipe
- blowtorch
- burn
- burner
- chimney
- corpse candle
- Davy lamp
- evaporating dish
- fireball
- flambé
- flambeau
- flamboyant
- flame gun
- flameout
- flame-thrower
- flame tree
- flamingo
- flammable
- flare
- flashback
- fuse
- glow
- gutter
- hurricane lamp
- kindle
- lamp chimney
- lance
- lantern
- light
- lighter
- napalm
- oriflamme
- oxyacetylene
- phlox
- safety lamp
- smoulder
- snuffer
- taper
- wick

