different between flaming vs firing

flaming

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?fle?m??/
  • Rhymes: -e?m??

Adjective

flaming (comparative more flaming, superlative most flaming)

  1. On fire with visible flames.
    The flaming debris kept the firefighter well back, and the sparks threatened the neighborhood.
    • 2011, Stephanie Owen Reeder, Amazing Grace: An Adventure at Sea (page 76)
      On Christmas Day, the pudding was served piping hot, with flaming brandy on top.
  2. Very bright and the color of flame.
  3. (colloquial) Extremely obvious; visibly evident. Typically of a homosexual male.
    To call him a flaming homosexual would be an understatement, but I think he acts that way just to see people react.
  4. (Britain, colloquial) Damned, bloody.
    I wasted three hours in that flaming traffic jam!

Translations

Verb

flaming

  1. present participle of flame

Noun

flaming (plural flamings)

  1. An emission or application of fire; act of burning with flames.
    • 1950, Market Growers Journal (volume 79, page 12)
      The burning is done before the crop has come up, and usually two flamings are necessary to kill all weeds []
  2. Sterilization by holding an object in a hot flame.
  3. (Internet slang) Vitriolic criticism.
    You can expect a flaming if you post irrelevant spam to a newsgroup.

See also

  • flame war
  • flame bait

Polish

Etymology

From Portuguese flamingo, from Spanish flamengo (flame colored), from Provençal flama (flame), from Latin flamma (flame).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?fla.m?ink/

Noun

flaming m anim

  1. flamingo

Declension

flaming From the web:

  • what flamingos eat
  • what flamingo
  • what flamingos usually stand on
  • what flamingos look like
  • what flamingos represent
  • what flamingos do
  • what flamingo name
  • what flaming means


firing

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?fa????/
  • Rhymes: -a?????

Noun

firing (countable and uncountable, plural firings)

  1. (ceramics) The process of applying heat or fire, especially to clay etc to produce pottery.
    After the pots have been glazed, they go back into the kiln for a second firing.
  2. The fuel for a fire.
    • c. 1611,, William Shakespeare, The Tempest, Act 2, Scene 2,[1]
      No more dams I’ll make for fish;
      Nor fetch in firing
      At requiring []
    • 1933, George Orwell, Down and Out in Paris and London, New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1961, Chapter 25, p. 133,[2]
      Downstairs there was a kitchen common to all lodgers, with free firing and a supply of cooking-pots, tea-basins, and toasting-forks.
  3. The act of adding fuel to a fire.
  4. The discharge of a gun or other weapon.
    • 1719, Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe, London: W. Taylor, p. 308,[3]
      [] they fir’d several Times, making other Signals for the Boat.
      At last, when all their Signals and Firings prov’d fruitless, and they found the Boat did not stir, we saw them by the Help of my Glasses, hoist another Boat out, and row towards the Shore []
    • 1940, Ernest Hemingway, For Whom the Bell Tolls, London: Jonathan Cape, Chapter 43, p. 417,[4]
      He heard the firing and as he walked he felt it in the pit of his stomach as though it echoed on his own diaphragm.
  5. The dismissal of someone from a job.
    • 2016, Matthew d’Ancona, “Theresa May’s Shock Therapy,” The New York Times, 19 July, 2016,[5]
      Even the most seasoned analysts of British politics were struck by the brutality of Ms. May’s hirings and firings.
  6. Cauterization.

Derived terms

  • oil firing

Translations

Verb

firing

  1. present participle of fire

Anagrams

  • RIFing

firing From the web:

  • what firing order
  • what's firing squad execution
  • what's firing angle
  • what firing on all cylinders
  • what's firing pressure
  • what firing range is near me
  • what's firing line
  • what's firing blanks
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