/fɔːd͡ʒ/, /fɔɹd͡ʒ/, /fo(ː)ɹd͡ʒ/
OriginFrom Middle English forge, from Old French forge, early Old French faverge, from Latin fabrica (“workshop”), from faber (“workman in hard materials, smith”) (genitive fabri). Cognate with Franco-Provençal favèrge. Doublet of fabric and fabrica. Computing sense perhaps derived from the early SourceForge service, launched in 1999.
- A furnace or hearth where metals are heated prior to hammering them into shape.
“Close to the hump-backed bridge on the lane leading into the Hambleden Valley is a mid-19th-century smithy, its inside walls hung with tools of the blacksmith's trade, though decorative wrought-ironwo”
- A workshop in which metals are shaped by heating and hammering them.
- The act of beating or working iron or steel.
“In the greater bodies the forge was easy.”
- A web-based collaborative platform for developing and sharing software.
“If the project uses a forge like GitLab, GitHub, or BitBucket, it can be very easy to search all past commit logs […]”
- To shape a metal by heating and hammering.
“On Mars's armor forged for proof eterne”
“Orion hit a rabbit once; but though sore wounded it got to the bury, and, struggling in, the arrow caught the side of the hole and was drawn out.[…]. Ikey the blacksmith had forged us a spearhead afte”
- To form or create with concerted effort.
“The politician's recent actions are an effort to forge a relationship with undecided voters.”
“Those names that the schools forged, and put into the mouth of scholars, could never get admittance into common use.”
“O purblind race of miserable men, / How many among us at this very hour / Do forge a life-long trouble for ourselves. / By taking true for false, or false for true.”
- To create a forgery of; to make a counterfeit item of; to copy or imitate unlawfully.
“He had to forge his ex-wife's signature. The jury learned the documents had been forged.”
- To make falsely; to produce, as that which is untrue or not genuine; to fabricate.
“That paltry story is untrue, / And forged to cheat such gulls as you.”
- oftenTo move forward heavily and slowly (originally as a ship); to advance gradually but steadily; to proceed towards a goal in the face of resistance or difficulty.
“The party of explorers forged through the thick underbrush.”
“We decided to forge ahead with our plans even though our biggest underwriter backed out.”
“And off she [a ship] forged without a shock.”
- sometimesTo advance, move or act with an abrupt increase in speed or energy.
“With seconds left in the race, the runner forged into first place.”
“Let's forge past that runner on the inside.”
- A surname from Old French.
Formsforges(plural) · forges(present, singular, third-person) · forging(participle, present) · forged(participle, past) · forged(past) · Forges(plural)