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Definition 2024


scathefire

scathefire

English

Alternative forms

  • scathe-fire, scathe fire

Noun

scathefire (plural scathefires)

  1. Destructive flames; conflagration.
    • 1874 (original 1611), Dramatic Works of Thomas Heywood:
      Beneath their ruines: and these horrid sights / Lighted by scathe-fires, they that haue beheld [...]
    • 1901, Albert Le Roy Bartlett, A Golden Way:
      Richard II, in 1385, and Henry VIII, in 1545, each wrecked it, and after this last scathe-fire it was rebuilt no more.
    • 2012, Elizabeth Moon, Echoes of Betrayal:
      You will give them my order to proceed to the scathefire track, with rangers you will find as guides, and parallel the Pargunese, ... The other will parallel the scathefire track until even with the Pargunese and stay even with them as they move.
    • 2013, Trishia Parson, Arcana:
      Any escaping villagers would be killed. She had heard of scathefires but fortunately her village had not been targeted.
    • 2014, Henry Burton, ‎C. Matthew McMahon, ‎Therese B. McMahon, The Law and the Gospel Reconciled:
      How much more in extremities of more importance, as the quenching of a scathe fire, or defending of a city, or country, by repelling the invading or beleaguering enemy?

See also