Yes. Blazing is an Adjective. It is the present participle of the verb to blaze.
The past participle, blazed, can be used for a different meaning of the verb, e.g. a blazed trail.
As an adjective ; "As they rest at night , Hummingbirds become torpid in order to save energy".
surfing , swimming , relaxing
amber blazing blinding blistering boiling brilliant burning crackling dazzling effulgent fiery flickering glaring glowing incandescent intense luminous popping radiant resplendent roasting scorching shining sizzling sweltering torrid vivid
Not usually. The present participles of some action verbs can be adjectives (e.g. blazing, running), but there is little application for "wearing" other than to mean wearing out, or abrasive (e.g. the sand was having a wearing effect on the rotor blades of the helicopters).
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
The word blazing can be an adjective meaning very fast. It is also the present participle of the verb blaze.
No, the word 'afire' is an adjective or an adverb, describing a noun as blazing or burning and a verb as with intense interest or excitement.
of Blaze, Burning with a blaze; as, a blazing fire; blazing torches.
There are no blazing angels.
In sentences such as "Don't touch the hot stove" or "That wire is hot to the touch" the word hot is the adjective. The word touch is a noun in either case - although in the second, it is the object of the adjective prepositional phrase.
A few examples would be... Jack went out in the blazing sun The fire raged like a blazing in ferno The couple had a blazing row in front of the the whole store
Blazing, means something hot. Example: I'm blazing. That mean I'm felling hot or something
Blazing Lazers was created in 1989.
Blazing Lazers happened in 1989.
Blazing Frontier was created in 1943.
Blazing Souls happened in 2006.
The Blazing World was created in 1666.