˜yÐÄvlog

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eternal flame

[ ih-tur-nl fleym ]

noun

  1. a contained fire ignited ceremonially and kept burning, usually in a public place and as a perpetual memorial or symbol:

    On our trip to the United States we visited the grave of President John F. Kennedy, where there is an eternal flame.

    The Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima features an eternal flame symbolizing the hope for a world free of nuclear weapons.

  2. a fire ignited naturally or accidentally, sometimes burning underground, and fueled by deposits of coal or natural gas that keep it from going out:

    At the Burning Mountain in Australia, an eternal flame has been slowly burning underground for 6,000 years.



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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of eternal flame1

First recorded in 1590–1600
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

The history of the band, in their own voices, is told in a new, official biography, “Eternal Flame†by Jennifer Otter Bickerdike.

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At the bottom of some steps burns an eternal flame surrounded by the names of Nazi concentration and extermination camps.

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Whenever she is at Liverpool's home ground, she visits the eternal flame memorial to think about all of those who lost their lives.

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Red carnations are placed by the Eternal Flame.

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I like Bobby — he was my favorite ballplayer to cover — and Bobby Bonilla Day is sort of like his eternal flame.

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