What is the name meaning of FURNISH. Phrases containing FURNISH
See name meanings and uses of FURNISH!FURNISH
FURNISH
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Malayalam, Marathi, Traditional
Master; Furnished; Knowledge
Female
English
English name derived from the tree name, from Latin acacia, from Greek akakia, ACACIA means "thorny Egyptian tree." Besides the flowering shrub or tree, Acacia is also the name of a fraternity. In Freemasonry, the Acacia symbolizes immortality of the soul, innocence and purity, and birth into a new life. The acaica seyal is believed to have been the biblical shittah-tree (Isaiah 41:19) which furnished the wood for the Ark of the Covenant and for the Tabernacle.Â
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly Kent and Sussex)
English (mainly Kent and Sussex) : from the Middle English personal name Pain(e), Payn(e) (Old French Paien, from Latin Paganus), introduced to Britain by the Normans. The Latin name is a derivative of pagus ‘outlying village’, and meant at first a person who lived in the country (as opposed to Urbanus ‘city dweller’), then a civilian as opposed to a soldier, and eventually a heathen (one not enrolled in the army of Christ). This remained a popular name throughout the Middle Ages, but it died out in the 16th century.Thomas Payne, who was a freeman of the Plymouth Colony in 1639, was the founder of a large American family, which included Robert Treat Paine (1731–1814), one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. The author of the republican treatise The Rights of Man, Thomas Paine (1737–1809), left England for North America in the mid 1770s, where he became involved in the movement that led to independence. His pamphlet of 1776, Common Sense, influenced the Declaration of Independence and furnished some of the arguments justifying it.
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Indian, Malayalam, Marathi, Traditional
Master; Furnished; Knowledge
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Furnished with Grass (Kusa)
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Furness.
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FURNISH
v. t.
To supply with anything necessary, useful, or appropriate; to provide; to equip; to fit out, or fit up; to adorn; as, to furnish a family with provisions; to furnish one with arms for defense; to furnish a Cable; to furnish the mind with ideas; to furnish one with knowledge or principles; to furnish an expedition or enterprise, a room or a house.
v. t.
To offer for use; to provide (something); to give (something); to afford; as, to furnish food to the hungry: to furnish arms for defense.
v. t.
To furnish with a vent; to make a vent in; as, to vent. a mold.
n.
Any larval gastropod or bivalve mollusk in the state when it is furnished with one or two ciliated membranes for swimming.
a.
Of or pertaining to a utricle, or utriculus; containing, or furnished with, a utricle or utricles; utriculate; as, a utricular plant.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Furnish
n.
To clothe with authority, power, or the like; to put in possession; to invest; to furnish; to endow; -- followed by with before the thing conferred; as, to vest a court with power to try cases of life and death.
v. t.
fit or furnish with a Vandyke; to form with points or scallops like a Vandyke.
n.
One who furnishes victuals.
n.
That which is furnished as a specimen; a sample; a supply.
a.
Furnished with a voice; expressed by the voice.
n.
One of the movable, slender, spinelike organs or parts with which certain bryozoans are furnished. They are regarded as specially modified zooids, of nearly the same nature as Avicularia.
n.
The act of furnishing, or of supplying furniture; also, furniture.
n.
A stringed musical instrument formerly in use, of the same form as the violin, but larger, and having six strings, to be struck with a bow, and the neck furnished with frets for stopping the strings.
a.
Furnished with vowels.
v. t.
To furnish with a valance; to decorate with hangings or drapery.
a.
Conveyed in a vehicle; furnished with a vehicle.
imp. & p. p.
of Furnish
a.
Furnished with a virole or viroles; -- said of a horn or a bugle when the rings are of different tincture from the rest of the horn.
a.
Furnished or clothed with villi.