0 present participle of ignite --
1 to (cause to) start burning or explode: --
The proposed restrictions have ignited a storm of protest.
The fuel spontaneously ignites because of the high temperature and pressure.
We have the task to use our diplomacy to help to put out fires across the world and prevent fresh fires igniting.
The needed driver energy, the power, and the beam quality requirements, as well as the level of synchronization the implosion and the igniting pulse have been found.
The primary focus was still the new milling tax, but it was also a last straw, igniting deeper frustrations.
The splintering of large trees, without igniting fire, is the most dramatic demonstration of the non-thermal explosive force of the electric arc.
Fires began igniting all over, however, and this boy could barely manage by himself.
The first category refers to the channeling of the igniting pulse through the remnants of the ablation process used to drive the fuel compression.
For the propagation of the igniting pulse, this level of control implies the success in producing a channel completely plasma free.
The practice of igniting and burning the spilled product was used to prevent fuel from reaching the river.