Ignite in a sentence as a verb

If you have a vapor leak it can ignite.

In real life, before the flame gets to the foam, it has to ignite the fabric.

Hopefully this will ignite some more competition in that space.

These extremist wants to ignite a civil war to "cleanse Ukraine from all Russian elements".

Something would have to go horribly wrong for a computer to ignite cardboard.

You can extinguish a flame temporarily but it will soon re-ignite.

Cardboard just seems easy to ignite because it's commonly burned with a butane lighter that burns at over 400C as well.

""Exposure of larger amounts of chlorine trifluoride, as a liquid or as a gas, ignites tissue.

I bet the temperature to get magnesium to ignite is much higher than the devices would naturally produce or be exposed to.

I am focusing on the concept of a fight as you realize, a struggle, a battle...You cannot know when it will manifest, when it will ignite and when it will finish.

The Mint hopes that software developers and entrepreneurs will use MintChip to ignite trade and commerce for these very-low-value markets.

Chlorine trifluoride and gases like it have been reported to ignite sand, asbestos, and other highly fire-retardant materials.

If there's electricity still going in, and you use your one shot with the facility clean agent, you might not actually put out the fire, or it could re-ignite, and then you either have no fire protection or only water.

Its an interesting accident of history that Gutenberg was able to make the innovations he did, and thereby ignite the explosive popularity of movable type in the West.

The two components spontaneously ignite when they come into contact - so you don't need to worry about an ignition system that can reignite the flame in mid-flight, making the whole system safer by eliminating components.

Suppose someone were to go and ask his neighbors for fire and find a substantial blaze there, and just stay there continually warming himself: that is no different from someone who goes to someone else to get to some of his rationality, and fails to realize that he ought to ignite his own flame, his own intellect, but is happy to sit entranced by the lecture, and the words trigger only associative thinking and bring, as it were, only a flush to his cheeks and a glow to his limbs; but he has not dispelled or dispersed, in the warm light of philosophy, the internal dank gloom of his mind.

Ignite definitions

verb

cause to start burning; subject to fire or great heat; "Great heat can ignite almost any dry matter"; "Light a cigarette"

See also: light

verb

start to burn or burst into flames; "Marsh gases ignited suddenly"; "The oily rags combusted spontaneously"

See also: erupt combust conflagrate

verb

arouse or excite feelings and passions; "The ostentatious way of living of the rich ignites the hatred of the poor"; "The refugees' fate stirred up compassion around the world"; "Wake old feelings of hatred"

See also: inflame wake heat