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furnish

American  
[fur-nish] / ˈfɜr nɪʃ /

verb (used with object)

  1. to supply (a house, room, etc.) with necessary furniture, carpets, appliances, etc.

    Synonyms:
    outfit, rig
  2. to provide or supply (often followed bywith ).

    The delay furnished me with the time I needed.

    Synonyms:
    outfit, rig

noun

  1. paper pulp and any ingredients added to it prior to its introduction into a papermaking machine.

furnish British  
/ ˈfɜːnɪʃ /

verb

  1. to provide (a house, room, etc) with furniture, carpets, etc

  2. to equip with what is necessary; fit out

  3. to give; supply

    the records furnished the information required

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Related Words

Furnish, appoint, equip all refer to providing something necessary. Furnish emphasizes the idea of providing necessary or customary services or appliances in living quarters: to furnish board; a room meagerly furnished with a bed, desk, and a wooden chair. Appoint, a more formal word now usually used in the past participle appointed, means to furnish completely with all requisites or accessories or in an elegant style: a well-appointed house. Equip means to supply with necessary materials or apparatus for some service, action, or undertaking; it emphasizes preparation: to equip a vessel, a soldier.

Other Word Forms

Etymology

Origin of furnish

1400–50; late Middle English furnisshen, from Old French furniss-, long stem of furnir “to accomplish, furnish,” from Germanic; compare Old High German frumjan “to provide”

Explanation

If you provide something needed, you furnish it. You can furnish an answer to a question in an interview, furnish the snacks at a party, or furnish a room by filling it with couches and chairs. Just as furniture fills a room or a building, to furnish is to fill a need. Another word for furnish is "provide." A furnace furnishes heat (try saying that ten times fast). A job furnishes you with an income. Your parents furnish you with a place to live, furniture included.

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing furnish

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

In 2021, more than a year after I had stopped seeing clients in person in rented offices due to the pandemic, I had the opportunity to furnish and decorate my own home office.

From Los Angeles Times • Apr. 16, 2026

Another Harrogate-based charity, Lifeline, which helps to provide housing to homeless and vulnerable people, has been working with Essential Needs to furnish accommodation.

From BBC • Apr. 10, 2026

We were champion racers, and my parents invested heavily in the cars—to the point that they didn’t fully furnish our living room.

From The Wall Street Journal • Mar. 17, 2026

AbbVie, based outside Chicago, has said it is more interested in acquiring mechanisms and technologies that can furnish drugs powering the company’s growth over the next decade and further, rather than proven assets.

From The Wall Street Journal • Jan. 7, 2026

In the OASIS, you could create your own private planet, build a virtual mansion on it, furnish and decorate it however you liked, and invite a few thousand friends over for a party.

From "Ready Player One: A Novel" by Ernest Cline

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