set fire to
English
Alternative forms
- set fire unto (archaic, poetic)
- set fire in, set fire on, set fire upon, set fire of, set fire by, set fire into (all obsolete)
Verb
set fire to (third-person singular simple present sets fire to, present participle setting fire to, simple past set fire to, past participle set fire to or (dialectal) setten fire to) (transitive)
- To cause (something) to be on fire; to set (something) alight. [16th c.]
- Synonyms: set light, set on fire, torch
- They set fire to the house.
- 1941 October, “Notes and News: A Serious Swiss Derailment”, in Railway Magazine, page 469:
- A freight train became completely derailed, blocking the tunnel entrance, and six of the wagons rolled down the mountainside, demolishing and setting fire on their way to a guard house, in which three soldiers were killed.
- (figurative) To destroy or dismantle (something).
- As soon as the new CEO arrived, he started setting fire to the old way of doing things.
- (figurative) To stir up intense emotion or action in (something).
- Synonym: set on fire
- All it took was one word to set fire to the crowd.
Translations
to cause to be on fire
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