make a bad situation even worse
say or do something to make someone angrier or more incensed than they already are
stir up, create or inflame strong feelings (anger, hate, love)
exacerbate or aggravate an explosive reaction
cause or incite strong emotions (usually negative but not always)
The president’s racist comments are really going to fan the flames of hatred among the crowd.
She had fancied Karl for ages, and when he smiled at her, he fanned the flames even more.
The fat cats at the bank get a massive yearly bonus, and it fans the flames of anger amongst the customers who lost money in the crash.
He said this fanned the flames of separatism into a raging fire.
The pandemic has fanned the flames of hate among communities.
Coronavirus outbreak fans the flames of the US-China decoupling debate in Washington.
I believe the political leader is fanning the flames of racial unrest.
All these moves are fanning the flames of popular anger, and it will burst out in a disaster.
Certain politicians are fanning the flames of the mobs to change the government.
He will continue to fan the flames of divisiveness with fear and anxiety.
It is irresponsible to fan the flames of the institutional crisis at a time when the country needs stability.
There is no origin for this idiom
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definition
Common phrase that has a specific meaning.