: an enclosed structure in which heat is produced (as for heating a house or for reducing ore)
Examples of furnace in a Sentence
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The company is also making smart investments — boosting capacity, modernizing facilities (such as the electric arc furnace in Alabama), and increasing high-grade iron ore exports.—Trefis Team, Forbes.com, 20 June 2025 Black Marylanders are exposed to about 70% more pollution from residential gas equipment, such as gas furnaces and water heaters, than white Marylanders.—Josh Tulkin, Baltimore Sun, 15 June 2025 Thomas and other activists would like to see a transition to cleaner steel and ironmaking, such as through electric arc furnaces and direct reduced iron, which would use hydrogen instead of natural gas.—Maya Wilkins, Chicago Tribune, 12 June 2025 One home climate solution is to switch to appliances that make less pollution, like switching from a gas furnace to an efficient heat pump.—Julia Simon, NPR, 9 June 2025 See All Example Sentences for furnace
Word History
Etymology
Middle English fourneyse, fornes, furneis "oven, kiln, furnace," borrowed from Anglo-French furneis, fornays, fornaise (continental Old French forneis —attested once as masculine noun— fornaise, feminine noun), going back to Latin fornāc-, fornāx (also furnāx) "furnace, oven, kiln (for heating baths, smelting metal, firing clay)," from forn-, furn-, base of furnus, fornus "oven for baking" + -āc-, -āx, noun suffix; forn- going back to Indo-European *gwhr̥-no- (whence also Old Irish gorn "piece of burning wood," Old Russian grŭnŭ, gŭrnŭ "cauldron," Russian gorn "furnace, forge," Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian gŕno "coals for heating iron at a smithy," Sanskrit ghṛṇáḥ "heat, ardor"), suffixed derivative of a verbal base *gwher- "become warm" — more at therm
Note:
The variation between -or-, the expected outcome of zero grade, and -ur- in Latin has been explained as reflecting a rural/dialectal change of o to u, borrowing from Umbrian, or the result of a sound change of uncertain conditioning; see most recently Nicholas Zair, "The origins of -urC- for expected -orC- in Latin," Glotta, Band 93 (2017), pp. 255-89.
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