different between bonfire vs spark

bonfire

English

Alternative forms

  • burnfire
  • bone-fire (obsolete)

Etymology

From Middle English bonefire, bonefyre, banefyre (a fire in which bones are burnt); equivalent to bone +? fire, with the first element perhaps later assimilating to French bon. Cognate with Scots banefire (bonfire).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?b?n.?fa?.?(?)/
  • (US) IPA(key): /?b?n.?fa?.?/, /?b?n.?fa?.?/

Noun

bonfire (plural bonfires)

  1. (obsolete) A fire in which bones are burned.
  2. A fire to burn unwanted or disreputable items or people: proscribed books, heretics etc.
  3. A large, controlled outdoor fire, as a signal or to celebrate something.

Derived terms

  • Bonfire Night

Translations

References

See also

  • balefire
  • bale

Verb

bonfire (third-person singular simple present bonfires, present participle bonfiring, simple past and past participle bonfired)

  1. To fire (pottery) using a bonfire.
    • 2000, Moira Vincentelli, Women and Ceramics: Gendered Vessels, Manchester University Press (?ISBN), page 42:
      Most women's traditions involve open firing such as bonfiring, pitfiring, or a fire surrounded by a low wall. More unusually, in Cyprus, Colombia and the Canaries individual potters have their own kilns.
    • 2004, Moira Vincentelli, Women Potters: Transforming Traditions, Rutgers University Press (?ISBN), page 212:
      Bonfiring has a very direct contact between the pottery and the flame. Firing time is usually quite short and the pots are carefully supervised through the process. Bonfiring, in general, does not create the same amount of wasters as kiln firing ...
    • 2018, Kerstin Pinther, Alexandra Weigand, Flow of Forms / Forms of Flow: Design Histories between Africa and Europe, transcript Verlag (?ISBN), page 102:
      [] while open bonfiring was practiced mainly by women and universally used in African traditions where it has a very low failure rate. It has been characterized as technically simple though in fact it requires a hyper refined combination of specific clay body, fuel, firing technique and atmospheric conditions - formulas derived from local experimentation mainly by generations of women.
  2. To make, or celebrate around, a bonfire.
    • 2014, Joan Rust, Anniecat Chronicles, Xlibris Corporation (?ISBN), page 131:
      [] are all bar-b-quing, swimming, jetskiing, bonfiring, and the next thing you know everyone is gone, leaving the house empty []
    • 2016, Alexandra Sirowy, The Telling (?ISBN), cover summary:
      She could only dream about bonfiring with the populars.

Anagrams

  • be in for

bonfire From the web:

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  • what bonfire means
  • what bonfire to kindle
  • what bonfire night in england
  • what bonfires should i kindle
  • what bonfire night all about
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  • what bonfires are on tonight


spark

English

Pronunciation

  • (General American) enPR: spärk, IPA(key): /sp??k/
  • (Received Pronunciation) enPR: späk, IPA(key): /sp??k/
  • Rhymes: -??(?)k
  • Homophone: SPARC

Etymology 1

From Middle English sparke, sperke, from Old English spearca, from Proto-Germanic *sprakô (compare Dutch spark and sprank, Middle Low German sparke), from Proto-Indo-European *sperg- (to strew, sprinkle) (compare Breton erc’h (snow), Latin sparg? (to scatter, spread), sparsus (scattered), Lithuanian sprógti (to germinate), Ancient Greek ??????? (spargá?, to swell), Avestan ????????????????????????????????????????? (frasparega, branch, twig), Sanskrit ??????? (parjanya, rain, rain god)).

Noun

spark (plural sparks)

  1. A small particle of glowing matter, either molten or on fire.
  2. A short or small burst of electrical discharge.
  3. A small, shining body, or transient light; a sparkle.
  4. (figuratively) A small amount of something, such as an idea or romantic affection, that has the potential to become something greater, just as a spark can start a fire.
    • , Book IV, Chapter XVII
      But though we have, here and there, a little of this clear light, some sparks of bright knowledge
    • 2013, Phil McNulty, "[1]", BBC Sport, 1 September 2013:
      Everton's Marouane Fellaini looks one certain arrival but Moyes, who also saw United held to a draw by Chelsea at Old Trafford on Monday, needs even more of a spark in a midfield that looked laboured by this team's standards.
  5. Any of various lycaenid butterflies of the Indomalayan genus Sinthusa.
  6. (in plural sparks but treated as a singular) A ship's radio operator.
  7. (Britain, slang) An electrician.
Synonyms
  • (small particle of glowing matter): ember, gnast, funk
  • (small amount of something, such as an idea, that has the potential to become something greater): beginnings, germ, glimmer
Derived terms
Descendants
  • ? Esperanto: sparko
Translations

Verb

spark (third-person singular simple present sparks, present participle sparking, simple past and past participle sparked)

  1. (transitive, figuratively) To trigger, kindle into activity (an argument, etc).
  2. (transitive) To light; to kindle.
    • 2009, Alex Jenson, The Serotonin Grand Prix (page 12)
      Byron sparked the cigarette. He sucked it dramatically and thrust it into Marko's hand.
  3. (intransitive) To give off a spark or sparks.
Derived terms
  • spark off
  • sparkle
Translations

Etymology 2

Probably Scandinavian, akin to Old Norse sparkr (sprightly).

Noun

spark (plural sparks)

  1. A gallant; a foppish young man.
    • The finest sparks and cleanest beaux.
    • Jones had no sooner quitted the room, than the petty-fogger, in a whispering tone, asked Mrs Whitefield, “If she knew who that fine spark was?”
  2. A beau, lover.

Verb

spark (third-person singular simple present sparks, present participle sparking, simple past and past participle sparked)

  1. (intransitive) To woo, court; to act the gallant or beau.
Synonyms
  • make love, romance, solicit; see also Thesaurus:woo

Derived terms

  • sparkish
  • sparker

References

  • Webster's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary, Springfield, Massachusetts, G.&C. Merriam Co., 1967

Anagrams

  • K-spar, Karps, Parks, Praks, parks

Danish

Etymology

From Old Norse spark, verbal noun to sparka (to kick).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /spark/, [sb?????]

Noun

spark n (singular definite sparket, plural indefinite spark)

  1. kick

Inflection

Verb

spark

  1. imperative of sparke

Faroese

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /spa??k/

Noun

spark n (genitive singular sparks, plural spørk)

  1. kick

Declension

Derived terms


Icelandic

Etymology

From sparka (to kick).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?spar?k/
  • Rhymes: -ar?k

Noun

spark n (genitive singular sparks, nominative plural spörk)

  1. kick

Declension


Middle English

Noun

spark

  1. Alternative form of sparke

Norwegian Bokmål

Noun

spark n (definite singular sparket, indefinite plural spark, definite plural sparka or sparkene)

  1. a kick (with a foot)

Derived terms

  • brassespark
  • frispark
  • hjørnespark
  • straffespark

Related terms

  • sparke

Verb

spark

  1. imperative of sparke

Norwegian Nynorsk

Noun

spark n (definite singular sparket, indefinite plural spark, definite plural sparka)

  1. a kick (with a foot)

Derived terms

  • brassespark
  • frispark
  • hjørnespark
  • straffespark

Swedish

Etymology

From Old Norse spark, from sparka (to kick).

Noun

spark c

  1. kick
  2. kicksled; short for sparkstötting

Declension

Anagrams

  • karps, parks, skarp

spark From the web:

  • what sparked off shays's rebellion
  • what sparked ww1
  • what sparked the pequot war
  • what sparked the american revolution
  • what spark plugs do i need
  • what sparked the french revolution
  • what sparked the civil war
  • what sparked the french and indian war
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