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fire n 1 A supply of cartridges or ammunition.
1924 ENGLAND 278 An arresting piece of news ran through the
shipa report that only one week's 'fire' was left. By this the hunters meant that
only cartridges enough remained for a week more of shooting. 'Dey been wastin' fire,'
claimed Bosun Mike, 'an' when de cattidges away, you'm done!' 2
Cpd fire-break: wide thoroughfare designed to impede the spread of fire.
[1820] 1895 PROWSE 410 Four Cross Streets or open spaces [sixty
feet wide] to serve as Fire-breaks. [1846] 1965 Am Speech xl, 169-70 King's Beach
fire-break, Hill of Chips fire-break. 1966 PADDOCK 86 In Carbonear only three
exceptionally wide transverse roads are regularly called firebreaks.
fire-fight: fire-fighting operation.
T 100/1-64 [I] was on a fire-fight one time and we got caught in
the fire. fire-pot: heavy iron pot in which fire was made
for cooking aboard a fishing-craft. M 68-7 [The fire-pot] was a
big iron pot with a hole in the side of it for ventilation.
fire-weed: spotted touch-me-not (Impatiens capensis)
(1893 N S Inst Sci viii, 371).
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