afire
English
Adjective
afire (comparative more afire, superlative most afire)
- On fire (often metaphorically).
- c. 1611, William Shakespeare, The Tempest, Act I, Scene 2:
- […] All but mariners
- Plunged in the foaming brine and quit the vessel,
- Then all afire with me: the king’s son, Ferdinand,
- With hair up-staring,—then like reeds, not hair,—
- Was the first man that leap’d; cried, ‘Hell is empty
- And all the devils are here.’
- 1856, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Aurora Leigh, New York: C.S. Francis & Co., 1857, Seventh Book, p. 275:
- […] Earth’s crammed with heaven,
- And every common bush afire with God:
- 1922, Edgar Rice Burroughs, The Chessmen of Mars, HTML edition, The Gutenberg Project, published 2010:
- … if I were a young man I should doubtless be willing to set all Barsoom afire to win you,…
- 1931, Nacio Herb Brown and Gordon Clifford, “Paradise” (song first sung by Pola Negri and later covered by Nat King Cole and Frank Sinatra):
- Her eyes afire
- With one desire.
- Then a heavenly kiss:
- Could I resist?
- 1950, Mervyn Peake, Gormenghast, London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, Chapter 63:
- Old claw-like hands, cracked with long years of thankless toil, would hold aloft a delicate bird of wood, its wings, as thin as paper, spread for flight, its breast afire with a crimson stain.
- c. 1611, William Shakespeare, The Tempest, Act I, Scene 2:
Translations
literally on fire
metaphorically on fire
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