Idioms for fire
Origin of fire
before 900; (noun) Middle English; Old English
fȳr; cognate with Old Norse
fūrr, German
Feuer, Greek
pŷr (see
pyro-); (v.) Middle English
firen to kindle, inflame, derivative of the noun
OTHER WORDS FROM fire
fir·er, noun coun·ter·fire, noun, verb (used without object), coun·ter·fired, coun·ter·fir·ing. re·fire, verb, re·fired, re·fir·ing. un·fired, adjectiveWords nearby fire
fiqh,
fir,
firbank,
firbolg,
firdausi,
fire,
fire alarm,
fire ant,
fire apparatus,
fire appliance,
fire area
British Dictionary definitions for fire off
fire
/ (faɪə) /
noun
verb
sentence substitute
a cry to warn others of a fire
the order to begin firing a gun, artillery, etc
Derived forms of fire
fireable, adjective fireless, adjective firer, nounWord Origin for fire
Old English
fӯr; related to Old Saxon
fiur, Old Norse
fūrr, Old High German
fūir, Greek
pur
Medical definitions for fire off
fire
[ fīr ]
v.
To generate an electrical impulse. Used of a neuron.
Idioms and Phrases with fire off (1 of 2)
fire off
Say or write and send away rapidly, as in He fired off three more questions, or She fired off a letter of complaint to the president. This expression originally (from about 1700) was, and still is, used in the sense of “discharge a weapon or ammunition,” as in The police were instructed to fire off canisters of tear gas. The figurative use dates from the late 1800s.
Idioms and Phrases with fire off (2 of 2)
fire