I agree with this burnination request. Answering the 4 questions for burnination:
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
No. It does not describe the contents of the question to which it is applied, as we do not know about what "use" the OP is talking about. If the use tag is the only one, then we would have no idea about the question. The tag is also ambiguous, from a comment by Makyen:
The wiki tag description states it is supposed to be "paired" with another tag. That implies that the "correct" tags would be ones which include the additional information: For example: [sql-use], [elixir-use], [perl-use], [php-use], [foxpro-use], [svg-use], [cobol-use], etc. I'm not arguing for the [use] of any of these tags. Each one would need to be considered on its own merits.
Pairing a tag with another implies that it's being used as a meta tag.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
No. "use" is a very broad tag and most of it'sits uses are not on-topic for the site. Some deleted questions are related to "using of code", "use of things to create code", etc, which are all either too broad, or primarily opinion based.
Additionally related to the point about "use" being a keyword, there are many other keywords, which are not tags. Unless the keyword is used to denote an important programming concept in a given language (like lambda), it is not useful to create a separate tag for each keyword.
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
No. The tag is superfluous on most of the questions. As mentioned earlier, it is required for the tag to be paired with another tag, and therefore it is not useful on it'sits own.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
No. It does not have the same meaning in all common contexts. There are 3 different meanings for the word use in common context, 1. As a programming keyword., 2. to "take, hold, or deploy" and 3. "the action of using something".
I agree with Cody's comment stating that 'A tag being "ambiguous" is not a sufficient reason for burnination', however this tag has a "No" answer for all the four criteria, and therefore it should be burninated.