fire
Kelime Anlamı :

1. ateşlemek.
2. kovmak.
3. ateş.
4. yangın.
5. işten atmak.
6. yakmak.
7. yanmak.
8. (kurşun, top, belirli bir el silah) atmak.
9. (tüfek, top, v.b.'ni) ateşlemek; (silah) ateş almak.
10. (toprak eşyayı) (fırında).
Sahne Örnekleri :
Zıt Anlamlı Kelimeler :
Tanımlar :
1. A rapid, persistent chemical change that releases heat and light and is accompanied by flame, especially the exothermic oxidation of a combustible substance.
2. burning fuel or other material: a cooking fire; a forest fire.
3. burning intensity of feeling; ardor. see synonyms at passion.
4. enthusiasm.
5. luminosity or brilliance, as of a cut and polished gemstone.
6. liveliness and vivacity of imagination; brilliance.
7. A severe test; a trial or torment.
8. A fever or bodily inflammation.
9. the discharge of firearms or artillery: heard the fire of cannon.
10. the launching of a missile, rocket, or similar ballistic body.
11. discharged bullets or other projectiles: subjected enemy positions to heavy mortar fire; struck by rifle fire.
12. intense, repeated attack or criticism: answered the fire from her political critics.
13. to cause to burn; ignite.
14. to light (something) up as if by fire: the morning sun fired the tops of the trees.
15. to add fuel to (something burning).
16. to maintain or fuel a fire in.
17. to start (a fuel-burning engine). often used with up.
18. to bake in a kiln: fire pottery.
19. to dry by heating.
20. to arouse the emotions of; make enthusiastic or ardent. often used with up: warriors who were fired by patriotism.
21. to discharge (a firearm, for example).
22. to detonate (an explosive).
23. to propel (a projectile); launch (a missile).
24. informal to throw with force and speed; hurl: fire a ball at a batter.
25. to utter or direct with insistence: fired questions at the senator.
26. games to score (a number) in a game or contest.
27. to discharge from a position; dismiss. see synonyms at dismiss.
28. to become ignited; flame up.
29. to become excited or ardent.
30. to become angry or annoyed.
31. to tend a fire.
32. to shoot a weapon: aimed and fired at the target.
33. to detonate an explosive.
34. to ignite fuel, as in an engine.
35. informal to project or hurl a missile: the pitcher wound up and fired.
36. physiology to generate an electrical impulse. used of a neuron.
37. to become yellowed or brown before reaching maturity, as grain.
38. fire away informal to start to talk or ask questions.
39. fire off to utter or ask rapidly.
40. fire off to write and send (a letter, for example) in haste.
41. between two fires being attacked from two sources or sides simultaneously.
42. on fire ignited; ablaze.
43. on fire filled with enthusiasm or excitement.
44. start slang to urge or goad to action.
45. under fire exposed or subjected to enemy attack.
46. under fire exposed or subjected to critical attack or censure: an official who was under fire for mismanagement.
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
1. to set on fire; enkindle: as, to fire a house or a chimney; to fire a pile.
2. to expose to the action of fire; prepare by the application of heat; bake: as, to fire pottery; to fire a slack of bricks.
3. to inflame; irritate the feelings or passions of: as, to fire one with anger or revenge.
4. to animate; give life or spirit to.
5. to drive out or away by fire.
6. to subject to explosion or explosive force by the application of fire (usually in the form of a spark, variously produced); discharge, send forth, or break up by explosion: as, to fire a gun or pistol; to fire a cannon-ball or a shell; to fire a blast or a mine.
7. to throw as a missile.
8. in veterinary surgery, to cauterize.
9. to illuminate strongly; make to shine as if on fire.
10. to eject, dismiss, or expel forcibly or peremptorily: commonly with out. see to fire out
11. below.
12. to eject, expel, or dismiss forcibly or peremptorily; discharge from employment; bounce: in allusion to the discharge of a cannon-ball.
13. to take fire; be kindled.
14. to be or become heated, irritated, or inflamed: as, his feet fire easily in walking.
15. to become excited; become irritated or inflamed with passion. see to fire up , below.
16. to discharge artillery or firearms: as, they fired on the town.
17. to discharge or throw a missile or missiles.
18. to ring all the bells in a peal at once.
19. to become irritated or angry; fly into a passion.
20. in geology, to break out in flames or incandescent gases: said of volcanoes.
21. the visible heat, or light, evolved by the action of a high temperature on certain bodies, which are in consequence styled inflammable or combustible; combustion, or the heat and light evolved during the process of combustion.
22. fuel in a state of combustion, as on a hearth or the ground, or in a grate, stove, or furnace; a burning mass of material lighted for the sake of warmth or for the utilization of the heat or light from it.
23. the burning of any large collection of material, as a building, town, forest, etc.; a conflagration: as, the great fire of london or of chicago; a forest or a prairie fire.
24. A spark or sparks; specifically, a spark, as from red-hot iron, or from flint or other stones when struck.
25. flashing light; vivid luster; splendor.
26. in precious stones, the quality of refracting and dispersing light, and the brilliancy of effect that comes from this quality.
27. A luminous body; a star.
28. A sensation of internal heat arising from either a physical or a mental cause; an inflammatory process or effect.
29. ardor; burning desire; passionate love for something.
30. consuming violence, as of temper; fierceness; vehemence: as, the fire of love or of enmity.
31. liveliness of imagination; vigor of fancy; force of sentiment or expression; capacity for ardor and zeal; animation; vivacity.
32. subjection to evil effects of any kind; especially, overwhelming trouble; severe trial: used with reference to the old or savage practice of trial or torture by fire, and especially to the passing through the fire to moloch mentioned in the bible: as, to pass through or be subjected to the fires of affliction.
33. [⟨ fire, v. t., 6.] the firing or discharge of firearms; the discharge of a number of firearms, as rifles, muskets, or cannon, from a body of troops, a battery, or the like: as, to be under fire; to silence the enemy's fire; enfilade and ricochet fire, etc.
34. A fire kindled with the object of leading a ship to destruction; a false or misleading beacon.
35. A fire burning chiefly in the interior of the mass of fuel, so as to avoid waste of the coal by combustion on the outside, where it is not in contact with the metal. for the common blacksmith's fire semi-bituminous coal is preferred.
36. figuratively, to make fiery; inflame; excite violently.
37. figuratively, to become inflamed; be violently excited or aroused.
from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia