Blaze in a sentence as a noun

What I need now is to blaze forward with the coding.

My guess is that it will eventually happen, but its not a trail I want to blaze.-----------------------------------

A better-funded competitor is going to blaze a trail through the market for you.

Seagram was designed with the intent that all its lights would blaze all night for aesthetic effect.

If it's an express train, it may blaze right through that stop, in which case you'll be backtracking on a train for the second time today!

Try doing it anyway, since if you know a language already you can blaze through it, and when you get to around 30 or so it sneaks up behind you.

Blaze in a sentence as a verb

In the fall, the sun would blaze in through the windows, and I know you're supposed to have overhangs, shades and air vents and underground air circulation systems, all of which we used.

I've seen people blaze through common tasks using ZSH that I do myself using an unholy combination of backscroll, mouse cut and paste, and cutting and pasting into my daily work notes in another window.

I asked for the price to consult a lawyer before and it cost around $2500 just to have a chat regardless of the outcome.\nThere is an unwritten guideline "do first, ask for forgiveness later" among people trying to blaze new trails.

"Runes" were the original name, as implemented in Plan 9 by the same folks, for what the standards committee later decided to call the relatively blaze term "Unicode codepoints"--and which are not quite the same thing as characters.

It wasn't a pity that Jesus waged peace on war, that Luther called ******** on indulgences, or that Copernicus proved Earth went around Sun. If they'd've chosen otherwise, in retrospect, what good would it have done?If Jesus led a rebellion against Rome, or Copernicus didn't publish, or, I don't know, Luther embraced the printing press + surplus cloth to trail-blaze the romance novel...Their common enemy was ignorance, and history's been shaped by those who didn't compromise on what they knew mattered.

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.

Blaze definitions

noun

a strong flame that burns brightly; "the blaze spread rapidly"

See also: blazing

noun

a cause of difficulty and suffering; "war is hell"; "go to blazes"

See also: hell

noun

noisy and unrestrained mischief; "raising blazes"

See also: hell

noun

a light within the field of vision that is brighter than the brightness to which the eyes are adapted; "a glare of sunlight"

See also: glare brilliance

noun

a light-colored marking; "they chipped off bark to mark the trail with blazes"; "the horse had a blaze between its eyes"

verb

shine brightly and intensively; "Meteors blazed across the atmosphere"

verb

shoot rapidly and repeatedly; "He blazed away at the men"

verb

burn brightly and intensely; "The summer sun alone can cause a pine to blaze"

verb

move rapidly and as if blazing; "The spaceship blazed out into space"

verb

indicate by marking trees with blazes; "blaze a trail"