set on fire in English

ignite, bu

Use "set on fire" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "set on fire" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "set on fire", or refer to the context using the word "set on fire" in the English Dictionary.

1. Love is set on fire.

2. The building was set on fire yesterday.

3. Burnable: capable of catching or being set on fire.

4. By a humble spark a town is set on fire.

5. She was set on fire and 19 crewmen were killed.

6. What does Atend mean? (obsolete) To set on fire; kindle

7. Two passenger cars were set on fire outside the hotel.

8. Six hundred Viking boats attacked Hamburg , which was set on fire.

9. During the riots several cars were overturned and set on fire.

10. They were hacked to death and their bodies set on fire.

11. Manuel Perez's brother left after his house was set on fire.

12. Less than a month later, the Reichstag building was set on fire.

13. In other instances we read that museum collections were set on fire.

14. Dozens of people have been injured and many vehicles set on fire.

15. I think we've walked past the one that's been set on fire.

16. During the riot shops were looted and cars damaged or set on fire.

17. The Palace of Justice - a terrible misnomer - was set on fire by the workers.

18. A tire set on fire with gasoline was around the neck of one victim.

19. In one shop, five girls, one an ethnic Tibetan, were set on fire and killed.

20. Inside, some oil was set on fire and equipment damaged, prompting an argument about nonviolence.

21. In addition, 200 stores were ransacked and the national parliament building was set on fire:

22. Trucks have been burned, drivers killed and merchandise have been looted and set on fire.

23. As I arrived a lorry had just been set on fire and was burning fiercely.

24. He was kidnapped by vigilantes in El Centro, beaten and robbed, and then set on fire.

25. The larger craft, the General Myers, grounded and was abandoned with its cargo set on fire.

26. Combustibility is a measure of how easily a substance will set on fire, through fire or combustion

27. In the unrest,[Sentencedict] the local police building was set on fire and its windows were broken.

28. Her left leg below the knee was blown off and her hair and clothes were set on fire.

29. He was beaten, set on fire, and cast into the River Enns with a rock tied to him.

30. Cars were set on fire and shops were looted following Vancouver Canucks ' 4-0 defeat to the Boston Bruins .

31. In the ensuing riot, a hut containing refugees seeking to flee the violence, mainly northerners, was set on fire.

32. "' Combustibility "'is a measure of how easily a substance will set on fire, through fire or combustion

33. This small but active group of Christians was set on fire, spiritually speaking, to begin a worldwide preaching campaign.

34. The poor woman was set on fire and her child ripped from her womb (Asklepios etymologically meaning to be cut out).

35. "More than 50 people have been Beheaded, women kidnapped, villages looted and then set on fire," he tweeted Wednesday

36. Before being dumped she had been beaten, stripped and then had petrol poured over her body and was set on fire.

37. Lighting fires under the hull was quite a dangerous operation, and many ships were set on fire and destroyed by Breaming

38. Middle English Anelen to set on fire, from Old English onǣlan, from on + ǣlan to set on fire, burn, from āl fire; akin to Old English ǣled fire, Old Norse eldr Learn More about anneal Time Traveler for anneal The first known use of anneal was in 1664

39. Multiple TV networks have been taken off air or banned from broadcasting the demonstrations and one radio station was set on fire.

40. Despite losing her bowsprit and her foremast, and being set on fire, she was ready for action again the very next day.

41. Atend (third-person singular simple present Atends, present participle Atending, simple past and past participle Atended) (transitive, obsolete) To set on fire; kindle

42. Whilst in harbour at Algiers on 4 August Arrow was set on fire by the explosion of the merchant ship Fort La Montee.

43. 1-24 of over 70,000 results for "Autobiographies" The Lady Whose Mouth I Set on Fire: True Tales from the ER

44. With the Spanish ships moored and vulnerable, the English sent in eight ships, which they had loaded with combustibles and set on fire.

45. Officials asking for information after house was Burglarized and set on fire A home at Country Roads Trailer Park in Poca was Burglarized and …

46. The German capital of Berlin has seen at least 29 luxury sedans set on fire since this year, including Citroens, BMWs and Porsches, the China News Service reported Monday.

47. Set Afire set alight, lighted, lit, ignited, set on fire, set ablaze, set burning, set aflame, set blazing The houses were set Afire, but there were only minor injuries.

48. Sixteen-year-old Suzanne Jane Capper died in Withington Hospital on 18 December 1992, from multiple organ failure arising from 80% burns after she was deliberately set on fire on 14 December

49. + Their fortified places you will set on fire, their choice men you will kill with the sword, their children you will dash to pieces, and their pregnant women you will rip open.”

50. At length, in the war of 1812, her dwelling was set on fire by English soldiers, prisoners on parole, when she was away, and her cat and dog and hens were all burned up together.