Bonfire in a sentence as a noun

I don't care who pushes them into the bonfire. :D

=/ Part of me wants to build a bonfire and toss it on. The other part of me goes, "But that's a book.

Then we just need a bonfire of the tax / duties system, and get something sane there.

The thing is, it still applies if I take that $1B and burn it in a big bonfire. I suspect you must see why your statement isn't convincing now, right?

Most people when they are fed up with a job just quit, they don't hold a photo-op-worthy beach bonfire. Who bought the four pizzas in the last photo?

When you say "invited to a bonfire at Ocean Beach", that doesn't mean you're going to burn a big heap of branded trash on the beach, right? Or am I just being a spoil-sport?

Or, have your executors burn it all in a massive bonfire. Most of us do not have infinite runway, however.

We'd all be better off banning bicycles and buying every cyclist an SUV and then having a mass lycra bonfire. Plus, think of all the cash we would save by not blowing it on extra bicycle fuel.

I think what they should do is just mutually agree to make a big bonfire, burn a couple billion in cash each, and then get back to business as usual.

I can spend $100,000 cooking a hotdog over a Tesla Roadster bonfire; this does not inject $100,000 of intrinsic value into the hotdog.

He stood in front of a permanent bonfire of people, with a gun, and imagines himself as a victim. The power of rationalization is terrifying.

I can play music and have 20 people over for a bonfire without bothering my neighbors. There's a lot of things I miss about living in the city, likewise there's a lot of things I miss about living in the country.

And in open source people is the only capital the project has, so it's pretty much like business owner making a daily cash bonfire in the backyard. Yes, people make dumb suggestions, especially people that are new to the area.

This lead to people who had acquired essentially free bitcoins getting paid actual money by folks who wanted to buy very-much-not-free contraband, which helped provide a bit of kindling for the speculative bonfire. ]

Get the economic-justice crowd in on the discussion and they start bandying about "debtor's prisons" and erecting straw-men for the dead-beat bonfire. But when a bank walks away from an underwater property because the deal suddenly sucks, they're seen as smart.

I suppose not everybody has hippy parents, not everybody is allowed to go to bonfire parties in their teens, not everybody takes *** before their first corporate job. It's like we need another world war and then another 60's and 70's, but then no 80's to erase all the lessons we learned.

Twitter was quite happy to sit and watch as people built fantastic services and tools on the service that without a doubt increased engagement, then sort of went "oh **** we need to make some money" and proceeded to **** on the bonfire 3rd party developers have created. It's even handed for Twitter and heavy handed for people that expect rationality from a company.

But there is so much risk stacked on top of risk that the only funds available are literally funds that the owner expects about as much return as they would get by making a bonfire out of them, with the exception the bonfire would keep them warm for one night. I was hoping Google's R effort would help with this but was disappointed in how that fund was managed with regard to new science.

Excellent project but fails the high tech ******* "hillbilly tracking" title due to lack of duct tape, no bonfire, no empty beer cans as structural material, no camo spray paint decoration, didn't see it up on concrete blocks, no stick welding with slag everywhere, and no baling wire. Still an excellent project, just not "hillbilly" as per the title; would have been done identically in downtown Manhattan or at my lab in the frozen north.

Quote Examples using Bonfire

I remember at nights the family would sit around a bonfire and talk. The elders would smoke cigars. I still can remember the feeling of the dry summer heat and the star-filled sky. Sometimes the topic would come up of what would happen if great-grandfather's oil wells dried up. He always laughed and said the same thing, "Every time they say we're running out of oil, the price goes to the moon." Then he'd ash his cigar and stare into the fire, "They've been saying it for sixty years. But those wells just keep pumping." Great-grandfather isn't around anymore, but his wells are still pumping. This last part isn't related to oil, but one year my great-grandfather tossed a box of fireworks into the bonfire.

Anonymous

Bonfire definitions

noun

a large outdoor fire that is lighted as a signal or in celebration

See also: balefire