English

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A cord of firewood.

Etymology

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From Middle English ferwode, fyrewoode, equivalent to fire +‎ wood.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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firewood (countable and uncountable, plural firewoods)

  1. Wood intended to be burned, typically for heat.
    Hypernym: fuel
    Hyponym: firelog
    Coordinate terms: kindling, tinder
    After many days of hard work, we finally had enough firewood for the winter.

Derived terms

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Descendants

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  • Chinese Pidgin English: firewood, 快也𭉉 (Chinese spelling)

Translations

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Anagrams

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Chinese Pidgin English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From English firewood.

Noun

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firewood

  1. firewood
    • 1862, 唐景星 [Tong King-sing], 英語集全 [Chinese English Instructor], volume VI, marginalia, page 34; republished as “Pidgin English texts from the Chinese English Instructor”, in Michelle Li, Stephen Matthews, Geoff P. Smith, editors, Hong Kong Journal of Applied Linguistics[1], volume 10, number 1, 2005, pages 79-167:
      涉𪢍治快也𭉉窩打
      *ship3 get3 zhi6 faai3 jaa5 wut6 wo1 daa2
      Ship catchee firewood, water.
      The ships provides[sic] wood and water.
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