We carried armfuls of foliage to the bonfire. 我们给篝火堆挟来几抱枝叶。
Only the embers of the bonfire remained. 那篝火只有余烬尚存。
The bonfire was piled with wood. 篝火用木柴堆得高高的。
bonfire
[ noun ] a large outdoor fire that is lighted as a signal or in celebration <noun.event>
Bonfire \Bon"fire`\, n. [OE. bonefire, banefire, orig. a fire of bones; bone + fire; but cf. also Prov. E. bun a dry stalk.] A large fire built in the open air, as an expression of public joy and exultation, or for amusement.
Full soon by bonfire and by bell, We learnt our liege was passing well. --Gay.
Black Americans have perhaps the greatest sorting out to do. The bonfire illuminated the existence of an impressive, moderate black middleclass.
The crowd, by midnight swollen to 500 people, lit a bonfire in the street and began smashing shop windows.
During the trial, prosecution witnesses testified that the officers were shot as they tried to break up a bonfire drinking party on the night of Dec. 4. Alcohol is prohibited on the Navajo Indian Reservation.
She said people were "riding around, buying T-shirts, going to a bonfire." But for all the hoopla, no unidentified flying objects were sighted Friday.
He reported a 1983 incident that he said was witnessed by his family, in which Jamba residents were gathered around a bonfire and a family was doused with gasoline and burned for witchcraft.
It's going to be a big bonfire.
In Jerusalem's ultra-Orthodox Mea Shearim neighborhood, children built a bonfire on the main street and dozens of young boys, most in shorts with their side-curls flying, were seen tossing bags of bread onto the fire.
With its thrift sleaze hung out for public view, Congress typically went into one of its Savonarola acts, which is to "reform" a problem with a bonfire of legislative retribution.
A man was killed when a beer keg placed on a bonfire exploded and a piece of metal severed his spinal cord, authorities said.