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Yes, in the sentence "a burning stove is dangerous," "burning" is considered a present participle. It is formed from the base verb "burn" and is used to modify the noun "stove."
If the stove was designed with legs (most are) then you should have legs on the stove. This is to keep the very hot parts of the stove away from things that can burn. Some masonry stoves do not have legs- but weigh several tons, and will never get hot enough to cause a fire.
Fire isn't something you can just light and walk away from, take the time to stoke the fire turn the logs and keep the embers hot and don't overload it then you should have a good fire
Our early ancestors cooked over an open fire just outside the cave's entrance. When man started building houses, the fire came indoors in the form of a wood burning stove. Later on, the wood stove gave way to coal fired stoves to cook on. On the invention of electricity the coal burning stove gave way to electrical appliances.
If you have food, grease left in the stove or on the stove top it can catch on fire. Bad wiring can also catch on fire.
remove all sooting and debris, repaint with stove bright of fire place paint, wax any glass and enjoy
Most of the time water will extinguish a fire, but there are some situations where water can make a fire worse by spreading it, such as a grease fire on a stove, or a puddle of fuel burning. In those situations, a fire extinguisher should be used instead.
Because you can forget about it and it can cause a fire. -K
If you put your face on a hot stove, it WILL burn. It will also burn if you keep it over hot steam/smoke or a fire for a few minutes. Moral of the story question: Don't try to put your face on or directly above a stove.
Hot dogs are great! And so is a little popcorn.
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Ramon Agpoon is the inventor of "Dragon Fire Stove"