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2110 entries found
furrier (n.)
"dealer or dresser in furs," late 13c., as a surname,
ffurrere
, via Anglo-French from Old French
forreor
"furrier," from
forrer
"to line or trim with fur" (see
fur
(n.)).
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furrow (n.)
Middle English
furwe
,
forowe
,
forgh
,
furch
, from Old English
furh
"furrow, trench in the earth made by a plow," from Proto-Germanic
*furkh-
(source also of Old Frisian
furch
"furrow;" Middle Dutch
vore
, Dutch
voor
; German
Furche
"furrow;" Old Norse
for
"furrow, drainage ditch"), from PIE
*perk-
(2) "to dig, tear out" (source also of Latin
porca
"ridge between two furrows," Old Irish
-rech
, Welsh
rhych
"furrow"). General meaning "narrow trench or channel" is from early 14c. In reference to a deep wrinkle on the face, by 1580s.
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furrow (v.)
early 15c., "to plow, make furrows in," from
furrow
(n.). Meaning "to make wrinkles in one's face, brow, etc." is from 1590s. Old English had
furian
(v.). Related:
Furrowed
;
furrowing
.
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furry (adj.)
1670s, "made of fur, covered with fur," from
fur
+
-y
(2). As a noun, in reference to "anthropomorphic animal characters with human personalities," also of people who identify with them, by 1995. Related:
Furriness
;
furries
.
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further (adv.)
Old English
furðor
,
forðor
"to a more advanced position, forward, onward, beyond, more distant; farther away; later, afterward; to a greater degree or extent, in addition; moreover," etymologically representing either "forth-er" or "fore-ther." The former would be from
furðum
(see
forth
) + comparative suffix
*-eron-
,
*-uron-
(compare
inner
,
outer
).
Alternative etymology (Watkins) traces it to Proto-Germanic
*furthera-
, from PIE
*pr-tero-
(source also of Greek
proteros
"former"), representing the root
*per-
(1) "forward" + comparative suffix also found in
after
,
other
. Senses of "in addition, to a greater extent" are later metaphoric developments.
It replaced or absorbed
farrer
,
ferrer
as comparative of
far
(itself a comparative but no longer felt as one).
Farrer
itself displaced Old English
fierr
in this job;
farrer
survived until 17c., then was reduced to dialect by rival
farther
. "The primary sense of
further
,
farther
is 'more forward, more onward'; but this sense is practically coincident with that of the comparative degree of
far
, where the latter word refers to real or attributed motion in some particular direction." [OED]
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further (v.)
Old English
fyrðran
,
fyrðrian
"to impel, urge on; advance, promote, benefit;" see
further
(adv.). Compare Middle Low German
vorderen
, Old High German
furdiran
, German
fördern
, probably from their respective adjectives via the notion in phrases such as Old English
don furðor
"to promote." Related:
Furthered
;
furthering
. After the
further
/
farther
split, this sense also continued in a shadow verb
farther
(v.), attested from 16c. but apparently dying out 19c.
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further (adj.)
Old English
furðra
"further, greater, superior," probably a prehistoric derivative of
further
(adv.). Compare Old Frisian
fordera
, German
vorder
"that is before another." In early Middle English it also meant "earlier, former, previous;" a great-grandfather was a
furþur ealdefader
(12c.), and a previous wife was referred to legally as a
forther wife
.
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furtherance (n.)
mid-15c., "assistance, support," also "advantage, benefit; advancement, promotion," from
further
(v.) +
-ance
.
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furthermore (adv.)
c. 1200, from
further
(adv.) +
more
. There also was a
farthermore
in Middle English. Related:
Furthermost
.
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furthest (adj., adv.)
late 14c., formed as superlatives to
further
(adj. and adv.).
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