The treaty is the latest attempt to resolve the ten-year conflagration.
the historic tavern burned to the ground in a horrible conflagration
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The last two songs ended in all-out thrash conflagrations, delighting the slam-dancers at the center of the floor.—
Steve Knopper,
Rolling Stone,
26 June 2026 Hamas’ October 2023 attack on Israel – the deadliest security failure in the country’s history – sparked the war in Gaza and a multifront conflagration that still smolders almost three years later.—
Dina Kraft,
Christian Science Monitor,
24 June 2026 The first one on the docket is the ouster of Wilson, who was — alongside Amanda Batula — at the center of the Season 10 conflagration.—
Kate Aurthur,
Variety,
15 June 2026 Chwalińska was the symbol of a tournament busted wide open, a chaotic conflagration of all the forces of women’s tennis these days, where depth causes danger from the moment the first balls fly.—
Matthew Futterman,
New York Times,
6 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for conflagration
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from Latin conflagrātiōn-, conflagrātiō, from conflagrāre "to be destroyed by fire, be burnt down" + -tiōn-, -tiō, suffix of verbal action — more at conflagrant