Noun
finery (countable and uncountable, plural fineries)
- (obsolete) Fineness; beauty.
- (countable) Ornament; decoration; especially, excessive decoration; showy clothes; jewels.
1980, John A. Crow, The Epic of Latin America:The city also shone through the luxury of the higher castes: in the fineries of their dress, the rich manner of their living, their many servants, silver table services, and showy furnishings.
- fine point; minute characteristic
2020, Lieven D’hulst, Kaisa Koskinen, Translating in Town:the translator should master the language he translates from as thoroughly as his mother tongue, knowing all its fineries
- (ironworking) A charcoal hearth or furnace for the conversion of cast iron into wrought iron, or into iron suitable for puddling.
1957, H.R. Schubert, History of the British Iron and Steel Industry, page 160:In front of the finery hearth in which the sow is melted down again, the finer is working with a long iron bar called a ringer (from French 'ringard') with which he keeps the molten iron in motion by stirring, an essential stage in the process of refining.
Translations
excessive decoration, showy clothes, jewels
charcoal hearth
- Bulgarian: пещ за рафиниране f (pešt za rafinirane)
- Czech: pudlovací pec
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