burnish

English dictionary entry

Meanings

verb
  1. To make (something, such as a surface) bright, shiny, and smooth by, or (by extension) as if by, rubbing; to polish, to shine.
  2. Of a stag: to remove the velvet (“skin and fine fur”) from (its antlers) by rubbing them against something; to velvet.
  3. To make (someone or something) appear positive and highly respected.
  4. To become bright, glossy, and smooth; to brighten, to gleam, to shine forth.
noun
  1. A shine of something which has been polished; a lustre, a polish.
  2. A shiny layer applied to a surface or other thing.
  3. The making of something bright, shiny, and smooth by, or (by extension) as if by, rubbing; (countable) an instance of this; a burnishing, a polishing, a shining.
verb
  1. Of a person's body: to grow large or stout; to fatten, to fill out.
  2. Of a thing: to increase in size; to expand, to spread out, to swell.

Pronunciation

/ˈbɜːnɪʃ/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vealhurl-burnish.wav /ˈbɝnɪʃ/

Word forms

burnish burnishes burnishing burnished no-table-tags glossary burnisht burnishest burnishedst burnisheth

Etymology

The verb is derived from Middle English burnishen, burnysshen (“to polish, burnish; (figuratively) to brighten, give lustre to; to clean (something) until shiny; to decorate (with something shiny), adorn”) [and other forms], from burniss-, a stem of Old French burnir (compare, for example, the first-person present singular indicative form burnis), a variant of brunir (“to make clean and shiny, polish; to make brown”) (modern French brunir), from Frankish *brūnijan (“to polish, make resplendent”), from Proto-Germanic *brūnijaną (“to decorate; tan”), from Proto-Germanic *brūnaz (“brown”, adjective), possibly from Proto-Indo-European *bʰerH- (“brown”, adjective). Unrelated to burn. The noun is derived from the verb.

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.