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14 Sentences With "blazing up"

How to use blazing up in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "blazing up" and check conjugation/comparative form for "blazing up". Mastering all the usages of "blazing up" from sentence examples published by news publications.

I was like 'Who was really blazing up before their test?
And like flipping a switch, #DeleteUber is back blazing up the social networks.
So there's really no excuse for not blazing up, sitting down, and watching it.
In a candid photo posted on Rogen's Twitter page in honor of 22017, the trio were seen rolling blunt and blazing up.
While Kanye's on the bench ... Snoop Dogg is blazing up for a second leg of his tour, and he announced it with a super high freestyle.
There's also this ... Nick says his brother, Nate Diaz, was NOT smoking CBD oil after his UFC 202 loss to Conor McGregor -- he was blazing up good ol' fashioned weed.
Chad Johnson was straight fire during a lecture at the University of Florida Thursday morning -- blazing up a cigar in the middle of class ... despite the fact it's a non-smoking campus!!
The study concludes a five-year observation of the effect the drug had on adolescent brains and found that the drug had serious ramifications on the mental health of teens blazing up the dank.
As more and more states begin to legalize medical or even recreational marijuana, gone are the days when the average weed user was (or at least seemed to be) a teenage boy blazing up with his friends.
Ramtin Ray Nosrati of Huntington Estate Properties is building 5 marijuana mansions in Bel-Air and Westside, and each residence contains a cannabis conservatory ... it's basically a stoner's spin on a cigar room, specifically designed for blazing up and growing ganja.
Fishermen gathered and burned Casuarinaceae's leaves around those vessels in order to deal with shipworm that bored into them. Since people from Hong Gai and elsewhere saw fire blazing up from this place all the time, they coined the name "Bãi Cháy". Under the French, this became Vatchay.
It is termed as a fiery weapon that creates a fierce fireball, blazing up with terrible flames and countless horrendous thunder flashes. When discharged, all nature including trees, oceans, and animals tremble, and the sky surrounds with flame, glaciers melt and mountains shatter with copious noise all around. When struck, it causes complete destruction to each and every resource of that area, further not a single blade of grass will ever grow in that area. There will be no rainfall for 12 divine years (4320 years) and climate condition will worsen.
The Independent, 8 October 1992, accessed 8 March 2010 In The Guardian, Michael Billington was more complimentary: "I respect Coward's blazing, up- front anger. In particular, he gives Lomas a powerful diatribe attacking the political confusion, economic chaos and press mendacity of Britain in 1930: a speech that is chillingly appropriate today.... What disfigures the play is not Coward's thumping message but the mechanical nature of Cavan's civilian Cook's tour and the easy caricature of soft targets: philandering press- magnates, pleasure-seeking bishops and purblind Lady Bountifuls. Surprisingly, Coward's social satire is less potent than his straightforward political anger." Billington, Michael.
"Post-Mortem, King's Head", The Guardian, 9 October 1992 The Sunday Times praised both the production and the play: > I would never have guessed that this 80-minute vitriolic anti-war fantasy, > written in 1930, was by Noel Coward. Its first professional production > reveals it as a tough, febrile piece, awash with melodrama and blazing up > now and again with bitter, glittering humour.... Coward's hatred of this > brittle, blasé age, which does not want to understand the horrors of the > first world war, is not so surprising as his perception that the second is > already in the making: someone actually remarks that the next Olympic games > (1932) could be a preparation for it. I never imagined that the Master, at > 31, was so politically switched on. The writing is a little mannered, but > the young cast handles it as if it was entirely real, and Steven Pacey, as > the disillusioned survivor, draws a most subtle sketch of upper-class > despair.

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