noun: A real or imaginary burning of unwanted paperwork
verb: To toss, or envision tossing, unwanted paperwork into a conflagration.
verb: To toss, or envision tossing, unwanted paperwork into a conflagration.
noun: She wanted to clear all the reports on her desk by throwing them on the bonfile.
verb: She told her secretary to bonfile the reports.
verb: She told her secretary to bonfile the reports.
by froglinguist May 23, 2014
Get the bonfile mug.Bonfilioed
Bonfilioed: publicly shamed for being a jerk online and getting dragged for months afterwards. Example: Did you hear about Jack? He got Bonfilioed. He publicly accused someone of being a pedo online and got stomped by the entirety of the internet.
Example: Mack said the N word (with an A )he said it was okay because he has Black friends. He got bonfilioed when he tried applying for a job and they found out he was a racist dirtbag.
Example: Mack said the N word (with an A )he said it was okay because he has Black friends. He got bonfilioed when he tried applying for a job and they found out he was a racist dirtbag.
by Nomoremisterniceguy January 2, 2022
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• Bonfire
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• Bonfire of the Vanities
• bongile
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• bonfire bollocks
“When I was younger and confronted with hardship, my grandpa used to tell me, he said, ‘Sometimes you’ve gotta put the broom in the bonfire.’ He was right.”
by Miss M C Bliss February 6, 2021
Get the Broom in the bonfire mug.British slang.
The art of putting a dampener on someones moment of glory/celebration.
Interchangeable with the phrase "You rained on my parade."
The art of putting a dampener on someones moment of glory/celebration.
Interchangeable with the phrase "You rained on my parade."
Person A: I got 3As in my exams! Awesome!
Person B: I got 7As.
Person A: Way to piss on my bonfire, bastard.
Person B: I got 7As.
Person A: Way to piss on my bonfire, bastard.
by Espiria June 15, 2006
Get the piss on my bonfire mug.An old tradition of burning of any objects that are regarded as sinful or immoral, as if a bonfire fueled by the condemned objects would erase the social problems associated with them.
The most infamous of such bonfires took place on February 7, 1497. The extremist Catholic priest Girolamo Savonarola organized a great public burning in Florence, a burning of what he saw as the frivolities of the Medici reign, and in particular that of Lorenzo de' Medici, whom Savonarola blamed for decadence and immorality (which the zealous priest defined as any art that did not portray Jesus or anything Biblical; nudity and paganism in contemporary art irked his one-track mindset).
While prostitutes were beaten and gay men were burned alive on his orders, Savonarola's campaign centered on the burning of books, paintings, sculptures, cosmetics, wigs, fancy clothing, mirrors, jewelry, masks, playing cards, scripts of secular songs, musical instruments, anything that Savonarola deemed extravagant.
A "bonfire of the vanities" can be as a metaphor to refer to the censorship or ban on "controversial" materials.
The most infamous of such bonfires took place on February 7, 1497. The extremist Catholic priest Girolamo Savonarola organized a great public burning in Florence, a burning of what he saw as the frivolities of the Medici reign, and in particular that of Lorenzo de' Medici, whom Savonarola blamed for decadence and immorality (which the zealous priest defined as any art that did not portray Jesus or anything Biblical; nudity and paganism in contemporary art irked his one-track mindset).
While prostitutes were beaten and gay men were burned alive on his orders, Savonarola's campaign centered on the burning of books, paintings, sculptures, cosmetics, wigs, fancy clothing, mirrors, jewelry, masks, playing cards, scripts of secular songs, musical instruments, anything that Savonarola deemed extravagant.
A "bonfire of the vanities" can be as a metaphor to refer to the censorship or ban on "controversial" materials.
The Bonfire of the Vanities was the result of a moral panic provoked by an extremist monk who was horrified by the nudity and pagan/secular images that were appearing in art as well as the perceived extravagance of the Medici, the family who ruled Florence and who was leading this artistic Renaissance and who Savonarola blamed for the economic and social problems that were beginning to plague the city. Any art or literature that he deemed "immoral" had to go.
Eventually, Savonarola's campaign turned against him and he was executed, but his example of censorship is one to be remembered as that matter is discussed.
Eventually, Savonarola's campaign turned against him and he was executed, but his example of censorship is one to be remembered as that matter is discussed.
by Lorelili August 1, 2011
Get the Bonfire of the Vanities mug.by high everyday May 30, 2016
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