Online Google Dictionary

forge 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/fôrj/,
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forges, 3rd person singular present; forged, past tense; forged, past participle; forging, present participle;
  1. Move forward gradually or steadily
    • - he forged through the crowded side streets
Noun
  1. A blacksmith's workshop; a smithy

  2. A furnace or hearth for melting or refining metal

  3. A workshop or factory containing such a furnace


  1. create by hammering; "hammer the silver into a bowl"; "forge a pair of tongues"
  2. furnace consisting of a special hearth where metal is heated before shaping
  3. a workplace where metal is worked by heating and hammering
  4. make a copy of with the intent to deceive; "he faked the signature"; "they counterfeited dollar bills"; "She forged a Green Card"
  5. invent: come up with (an idea, plan, explanation, theory, or principle) after a mental effort; "excogitate a way to measure the speed of light"
  6. move ahead steadily; "He forged ahead"
  7. A forge is both the workplace and hearth of a smith or a blacksmith. The workplace is sometimes referred to as a smithy.
  8. Forge is a fictional character in the , a superhero associated with The X-Men.
  9. The Forge is a fictional black operations organisation from the Big Finish Productions audio plays based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. The canonicity of the audio plays, like the other spin-off media, is unclear.
  10. Mastic was a station stop along the Montauk Branch of the Long Island Rail Road. It was originally opened as Forge around 1882, and renamed Mastic around 1893. ...
  11. Forge is a fictional technology created by D.A.D.O. in D. J. MacHale's The Pendragon Adventure book series. It is a shapeshifting technology first seen in book seven, The Quillan Games. Forge was first introduced by Mark Dimond and Andy Mitchell as a science fair project. ...
  12. A software forge is a collaboration platform allowing collaborative software development over the Internet. A forge platform aggregates a set of applications with integrated Web interfaces, and generally hosts multiple independent projects. ...
  13. (forged) fake (as documents); Fabricated by forging or at a forge, by working hot metal
  14. (FORGED) Fraudulently executed, counterfeited.
  15. (Forged) Considered to be the best wheel manufacturing technique, forging allows for the compression of an aluminum billet (one solid piece of aluminum) into an aluminum wheel using over 13 million pounds of pressure combined with heat. ...
  16. (Forged) A club where the head is made from one piece of light alloy/metal. A forged club gives a golfer more feeling when striking the ball.
  17. (Forged) Forging means that the clubhead is made from a single solid piece of steel that is heated and cooled into the correct shape, instead of being cast in a preformed mould. Often a forged iron will give you more "feel".
  18. (forged) ferrous metal shaped, usually by hammering, while at a red or white heat in blacksmithing, or cold in the case of non-ferrous metals.
  19. (FORGED) A forming process which dramatically changes the length and cross contours of a material to form highly sculpted shapes.
  20. (FORGED) The process of forming ingots, blooms and billets into wrought shaped products by applying pressure at elevated temperatures using a press. Some austenitic stainless steels and nonferrous alloys are formed at room temperature.
  21. (Forged) A blacksmith shapes iron by first softening it in a very hot fire-usually produced with coal. A skilled blacksmith can judge just how hot and malleable a piece of metal is by its color-white, yellow, orange, red or purple. ...
  22. (Forged) Combining both Anvil and Hammer elements.
  23. (aka: "forged irons") a process by which iron clubheads are manufactured. Specifically the heads are stamped or hammered into shape and then filed and ground into a finished product. The opposite of 'cast'. ...
  24. (forged) not real; counterfeit or copied
  25. (Forging) Interference in the gait in which the hind-foot strikes the front foot. Caused by a horse "overstepping"