Sentences

He threw a fagot of wood into the fireplace to keep the fire going.

The old man had a stack of fagots in the corner of his barn.

During World War I, women and children sometimes made paper fagots by binding pages of printed material in book form and incinerating them as a method of pyric defense to reduce the enemy's ability to read important information.

The dry fagot cracked as he threw it into the flame.

She bundled up a few fagots to take home for the week.

He carried the fagot to the hearth and laid it carefully on the grate.

We used a fagot of kindling to get the larger logs going.

The fagot came loose and almost went out before he added kindling.

The loose sticks in the fagot didn't quite catch fire at first.

The fagot burnt down into smaller pieces that lasted for hours.

Fagots of dry wood were stored under the porch to keep them from getting wet.

The children played with a fagot of colored sticks on the floor.

In medieval times, people would burn fagots to protest or cause destruction.

The old cabin's hearth was regularly replenished with fagots.

The fagot was so well-made that it stayed together even when soaked in water.

They needed to gather more fagots for the long winter ahead.

The fagot was carefully bound and would last longer in the fire.

Fagots are a common sight in rural areas for outdoor gatherings.

The fagot provided enough warmth to extinguish the flame and extinguish hopes of another campfire.