| Noun | 1. | blaze - a strong flame that burns brightly; "the blaze spread rapidly"flame, flaming, fire - the process of combustion of inflammable materials producing heat and light and (often) smoke; "fire was one of our ancestors' first discoveries" | |
| 2. | blaze - a cause of difficulty and suffering; "war is hell"; "go to blazes"trouble - an event causing distress or pain; "what is the trouble?"; "heart trouble" | |
| 3. | blaze - noisy and unrestrained mischief; "raising blazes" | |
| 4. | blaze - great brightness; "a glare of sunlight"; "the flowers were a blaze of color"brightness - the location of a visual perception along the black-to-white continuum | |
| 5. | blaze - a light-colored marking; "they chipped off bark to mark the trail with blazes"; "the horse had a blaze between its eyes" | |
| Verb | 1. | blaze - shine brightly and intensively; "Meteors blazed across the atmosphere"beam, shine - emit light; be bright, as of the sun or a light; "The sun shone bright that day"; "The fire beamed on their faces" | |
| 2. | blaze - shoot rapidly and repeatedly; "He blazed away at the men" | |
| 3. | blaze - burn brightly and intensely; "The summer sun alone can cause a pine to blaze"burn, combust - undergo combustion; "Maple wood burns well" | |
| 4. | blaze - move rapidly and as if blazing; "The spaceship blazed out into space" | |
| 5. | blaze - indicate by marking trees with blazes; "blaze a trail"mark - designate as if by a mark; "This sign marks the border"; "He indicated where the border ended" | |