First, pronunciation
English: [/fle? m/]; United States: [/fle? m/]
Second, Chinese translation.
Flame; Passion; Flame; Orange; Strong feelings; Orange yellow; Bright red
Verb (abbreviation for verb) burns; Turn red (due to strong emotions), make red.
Third, form.
Third person singular: flame
Complex number: flame
Present participle: burning
Past tense: burning
Past participle: flamed
Fourth, phrase collocation.
The flame of passion
flame cutting
Flame propagation
fire resistance
flamethrower
fire resistance
Verb (abbreviation of verb) bilingual example 1. Flame? Melted? Answer? Leadership? Pipe? And then what? Is it lit? Leaking water? Gas. ?
The flame melted a section of lead pipe and ignited the leaked gas.
2. Red? And then what? Yellow? Flame? Spray it? Out? Yes? That? It's on fire. ?
The fire spewed red and yellow flames.
3. They? Have you tried? Where to? Beat? That? Flame? Come back. ?
They want to stop the fire from spreading.
4. sheets? Yes? Flame? Got shot? Become? That? Air, driving? Cloud? Yes? Smoking? Are you online? His? Direction. ?
Flames shot into the air and thick smoke came at him.
5. But? That? Light? Used to be. It's gone. Flame? Had it? Passed away. ?
But the dawn disappeared, and so did the passion.
6. How about you? Is it okay? Really? Answer? Change? Yes? Heart? What if? Ann? Old? Flame? Waltz? Back? Become? Yours Life. ?
If the old passion comes back to your life, your heart may change a little.
Use of intransitive verbs
1. When used as an intransitive verb, it basically means "to make a flame burn", which usually means that rapidly burning gas or smoke forms a flame;
2. Extension can refer to "getting angry" and "flying into a rage";
3. It can also be used as a transitive verb in the sentence, meaning "the fire has ignited [dyed red]", followed by a simple object and an adjective as a compound object as a complement.