blaze
verb [ I ] uk/bleɪz/ us/bleɪz/
熊熊燃烧
to burn brightly and strongly
The sun was blazing down that afternoon. 那天下午烈日炎炎。
literary闪耀;发亮光
to be brightly lit or full of colour
Isaac's eyes suddenly blazed with anger. 艾萨克的眼里突然冒出怒火。
(枪炮等)开火,扫射
When a gun or a person using a gun blazes, the gun fires and continues firing.
The ship's guns blazed at the British as they tried to run for shore. 船上的枪炮向着试图跑上岸的英国人开火扫射。
See also: with guns blazing
Idiom
blaze a trailidiom 开拓道路;起先导作用
to do something that has never been done before
Le Corbusier blazed a trail in architecture. 勒·柯布西耶在建筑领域开创了新潮流。
blaze
noun [ C ] uk/bleɪz/ us/bleɪz/
(FIRE)
大火,烈火
a large, strong fire
Firefighters took two hours to control the blaze. 消防队员花了两个小时才控制住大火。
(STRONG EFFECT)
a blaze of something 灿烂;炫目;绚烂
something that has a very powerful or noticeable effect
The garden is a blaze of colour in autumn. 秋天花园里姹紫嫣红。
His book was launched in a blaze of publicity. 他的书在大张旗鼓的宣传下上市销售。
(MARK)
(马等动物面部的)白斑
a white mark on the face of a horse or other animal
Idioms
go to blazesidiom old-fashioned informal 走开!
used to tell someone to go away
what the blazes...?idiom old-fashioned informal (用于增强愤怒的语气)到底…?究竟…?
used to give force to something you feel angry about
What the blazes did he do that for? 他到底为什么那么做?