Depends. If the fire is from a chemical reaction from a natural fuel (like wood), there will more then likely be smoke first. If the fire is electrical or chemical from a highly volitile fuel (like gasoline), the fire will be nearly instantanious. There's too many unknown variables to give a 100% correct answer. Putting those variable's aside, however, this should be close enough.
Fire comes before the smoke.
Spark
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Fire
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Well usually the smoke will suffocate you first, but it's a totally different story if you catch on fire. The heat itself won't kill you because the smoke or fire will get to you before any heatstroke/heat exhaustion comes along.
smoke
Smoke comes from a fire at it's base. Hot air rises so the smoke is carried upward by the heated air
Smoke
Smoke or Fire was created in 1998.
Spicy foods are like a fire explosion in your mouth, and are sometimes red, like fire. On cartoons, smoke usually comes out of the ears, like fire! Tom & Jerry is an example! :)
A chimmnie is on top of an house that smoke comes out the smoke comes from your fireplace at home if you put on a fire on poptropica 24 carrot you have to get the bowl and the cat milk to give back to Charlie the owner of an shop. So you have to enter the chimmnie to get in
It depends on the fire, but if the fuel is largely organic matter and the amount of air is not restricted, the gas from the fire will be largely carbon dioxide and water vapor.
No Smoke Without Fire was created in 1978.
Smoke from a Distant Fire was created in 1977.
No Smoke Without a Fire was created in 1989.
There is a saying that where there is smoke, there is fire. This means that if there is evidence of something happening, then it is likely that there is a fire, or cause, for it. This saying can be applied to many situations in life. For example, if there is smoke coming from a building, it is likely that there is a fire inside. If there is smoke coming from a car, it is likely that the engine is on fire. In both of these cases, the smoke is evidence of a fire, or cause.