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1 to burst into flames
to burst into flamesfazer-se em chamas. to fan the flames, add fuel to the flames encorajar, tornar uma situação mais intensa ou extrema. -
2 flame
[fleim] 1. noun(the bright light of something burning: A small flame burned in the lamp.) chama2. verb1) (to burn with flames: His eyes flamed with anger.) flamejar2) (to become very hot, red etc: Her cheeks flamed with embarrassment.) incendiar-se•- flaming- flammable
- flame of the forest* * *[fleim] n 1 chama, fulgor, fogo, brilho, lume. 2 ardor, zelo, paixão. 3 coll namorado, namorada. • vt+vi 1 chamejar, flamejar, lançar chamas. 2 arder, queimar-se, incendiar-se, inflamar-se, brilhar, fulgurar, resplandecer. 3 arder em paixões, inflamar-se, abrasar-se, exaltar-se. 4 encolerizar-se, explodir. 5 ruborizar-se. in flames em chamas. to burst into flames fazer-se em chamas. to fan the flames, add fuel to the flames encorajar, tornar uma situação mais intensa ou extrema. to go up in flames incendiar-se rapidamente. -
3 fan
I 1. [fæn] noun1) (a flat instrument held in the hand and waved to direct a current of air across the face in hot weather: Ladies used to carry fans to keep themselves cool.) leque2) (a mechanical instrument causing a current of air: He has had a fan fitted in the kitchen for extracting smells.) ventilador2. verb1) (to cool (as if) with a fan: She sat in the corner, fanning herself.) abanar2) (to increase or strengthen (a fire) by directing air towards it with a fan etc: They fanned the fire until it burst into flames.) ventilar/atiçarII [fæn] noun(an enthusiastic admirer of a sport, hobby or well-known person: I'm a great fan of his; football fans; ( also adjective) fan mail/letters (= letters etc sent by admirers).) admirador/aficionado* * *fan1[fæn] n 1 leque, abanico. 2 arch joeira, peneira. 3 ventarola, ventoinha, ventilador, abano. 4 Naut pá da hélice. 5 asa, cauda das aves em forma de leque. • vt+vi 1 abanar, agitar o ar com o leque, refrescar, movendo abano ou leque. 2 ventilar, aventar, arejar. 3 joeirar, padejar. 4 soprar, atear (o fogo). fig atiçar, excitar, inflamar. 5 bafejar, soprar brandamente. 6 soprar, fazer voar, abrir(-se) ou desdobrar em leque ou em forma de leque. the shit hit the fan vulg caiu (jogaram) merda no ventilador. to fan out espalhar-se (diz-se de grupo de pessoas que tomam direções diversas). to fan the flames tornar uma situação mais intensa ou extrema.————————fan2[fæn] n (abbr fanatic) coll fã, admirador, entusiasta, aficionado. football fan / torcedor de futebol. -
4 fan
I 1. [fæn] noun1) (a flat instrument held in the hand and waved to direct a current of air across the face in hot weather: Ladies used to carry fans to keep themselves cool.) leque2) (a mechanical instrument causing a current of air: He has had a fan fitted in the kitchen for extracting smells.) ventilador2. verb1) (to cool (as if) with a fan: She sat in the corner, fanning herself.) abanar2) (to increase or strengthen (a fire) by directing air towards it with a fan etc: They fanned the fire until it burst into flames.) abanarII [fæn] noun(an enthusiastic admirer of a sport, hobby or well-known person: I'm a great fan of his; football fans; ( also adjective) fan mail/letters (= letters etc sent by admirers).) fã
См. также в других словарях:
burst into flames — {v. phr.} To begin to burn suddenly. * /The children threw away some burning matches and the barn burst into flames./ … Dictionary of American idioms
burst into flames — {v. phr.} To begin to burn suddenly. * /The children threw away some burning matches and the barn burst into flames./ … Dictionary of American idioms
burst\ into\ flames — v. phr. To begin to burn suddenly. The children threw away some burning matches and the barn burst into flames … Словарь американских идиом
burst into flames — ignited, caught on fire quickly … English contemporary dictionary
burst into something — burst into (something) to begin to produce a lot of something. The children burst into tears when they saw their ruined toys. The car burst into flames. The whole situation was so ridiculous, I simply burst into laughter. Related vocabulary:… … New idioms dictionary
burst into — (something) to begin to produce a lot of something. The children burst into tears when they saw their ruined toys. The car burst into flames. The whole situation was so ridiculous, I simply burst into laughter. Related vocabulary: break into… … New idioms dictionary
burst into something — ˈburst into sth derived to start producing sth suddenly and with great force • The aircraft crashed and burst into flames (= suddenly began to burn). • She burst into tears … Useful english dictionary
burst into — phrasal verb Word forms burst into : present tense I/you/we/they burst into he/she/it bursts into present participle bursting into past tense burst into past participle burst into 1) burst into something [transitive] to suddenly start doing… … English dictionary
burst into sth phrasal — verb (T) 1 to suddenly begin to make a sound, especially to start singing, crying, or laughing: The audience burst into applause. | burst into song: Everyone on the bus burst into song as we got closer to home. | burst into tears: Benny suddenly… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
burst into — 1) PHRASAL VERB If you burst into tears, laughter, or song, you suddenly begin to cry, laugh, or sing. [V P n] She burst into tears and ran from the kitchen. [V P n] ...books that cause adults to burst into helpless laughter. 2) PHRASAL VERB When … English dictionary
ˈburst ˌinto sth — phrasal verb 1) to suddenly start doing something Terri keeps bursting into tears (= starting to cry) for no reason.[/ex] 2) burst into flames to suddenly start burning … Dictionary for writing and speaking English