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 forge [fɔrdʒ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 熔炉, 铁工厂

vt. 打制, 锻造, 伪造

vi. 锻造, 伪造

[机] 锻工场, 锻造炉


  1. They forged their manager's signature on the cheque.
    他们在支票上伪造了经理的签名。
  2. The ship forged ahead under a favorable wind.
    船乘风快速前进。
  3. Donald be forced to forge a signature.
    唐纳德被迫伪造签字。


forge
[ noun ]
  1. furnace consisting of a special hearth where metal is heated before shaping

  2. <noun.artifact>
  3. a workplace where metal is worked by heating and hammering

  4. <noun.artifact>
[ verb ]
  1. create by hammering

  2. <verb.creation> hammer
    hammer the silver into a bowl
    forge a pair of tongues
  3. make a copy of with the intent to deceive

  4. <verb.creation>
    counterfeit fake
    he faked the signature
    they counterfeited dollar bills
    She forged a Green Card
  5. come up with (an idea, plan, explanation, theory, or principle) after a mental effort

  6. <verb.creation>
    contrive devise excogitate formulate invent
    excogitate a way to measure the speed of light
  7. move ahead steadily

  8. <verb.motion>
    He forged ahead
  9. move or act with a sudden increase in speed or energy

  10. <verb.motion>
    spirt spurt
  11. make something, usually for a specific function

  12. <verb.creation>
    form mold mould shape work
    She molded the rice balls carefully
    Form cylinders from the dough
    shape a figure
    Work the metal into a sword
  13. make out of components (often in an improvising manner)

  14. <verb.creation>
    fashion
    She fashioned a tent out of a sheet and a few sticks


Forge \Forge\, v. i. [See {Forge}, v. t., and for sense 2, cf.
{Forge} compel.]
1. To commit forgery.

2. (Naut.) To move heavily and slowly, as a ship after the
sails are furled; to work one's way, as one ship in
outsailing another; -- used especially in the phrase to
forge ahead. --Totten.

And off she [a ship] forged without a shock. --De
Quincey.


Forge \Forge\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Forged}; p. pr. & vb. n.
{Forging}.] [F. forger, OF. forgier, fr. L. fabricare,
fabricari, to form, frame, fashion, from fabrica. See
{Forge}, n., and cf. {Fabricate}.]
1. To form by heating and hammering; to beat into any
particular shape, as a metal.

Mars's armor forged for proof eterne. --Shak.

2. To form or shape out in any way; to produce; to frame; to
invent.

Those names that the schools forged, and put into
the mouth of scholars, could never get admittance
into common use. --Locke.

Do forge a life-long trouble for ourselves.
--Tennyson.

3. To coin. [Obs.] --Chaucer.

4. To make falsely; to produce, as that which is untrue or
not genuine; to fabricate; to counterfeit, as, a
signature, or a signed document.

That paltry story is untrue,
And forged to cheat such gulls as you. --Hudibras.

Forged certificates of his . . . moral character.
--Macaulay.

Syn: To fabricate; counterfeit; feign; falsify.


Forge \Forge\ (f[=o]rj), n. [F. forge, fr. L. fabrica the
workshop of an artisan who works in hard materials, fr. faber
artisan, smith, as adj., skillful, ingenious; cf. Gr. ? soft,
tender. Cf. {Fabric}.]
1. A place or establishment where iron or other metals are
wrought by heating and hammering; especially, a furnace,
or a shop with its furnace, etc., where iron is heated and
wrought; a smithy.

In the quick forge and working house of thought.
--Shak.

2. The works where wrought iron is produced directly from the
ore, or where iron is rendered malleable by puddling and
shingling; a shingling mill.

3. The act of beating or working iron or steel; the
manufacture of metallic bodies. [Obs.]

In the greater bodies the forge was easy. --Bacon.

{American forge}, a forge for the direct production of
wrought iron, differing from the old Catalan forge mainly
in using finely crushed ore and working continuously.
--Raymond.

{Catalan forge}. (Metal.) See under {Catalan}.

{Forge cinder}, the dross or slag form a forge or bloomary.


{Forge rolls}, {Forge train}, the train of rolls by which a
bloom is converted into puddle bars.

{Forge wagon} (Mil.), a wagon fitted up for transporting a
blackmith's forge and tools.

{Portable forge}, a light and compact blacksmith's forge,
with bellows, etc., that may be moved from place to place.


Forge \Forge\, v. t. (Naut.)
To impel forward slowly; as, to forge a ship forward.

  1. The nation's church leaders met 30 years ago in an attempt to forge a united front to challenge apartheid, but the agreement collapsed when the Dutch Reformed Church rejected it.
  2. Budget committee members and staffs of both parties have been meeting in efforts to sound out differences and forge preliminary agreements.
  3. Gyllenhammar reiterated that the decision to forge the agreement with Renault didn't represent an effort by either of the partners eventually to take over the other.
  4. West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl sought to calm fears among the NATO allies on Thursday by promising to keep them fully informed on plans to forge a new German state.
  5. He is confident that, eventually, South Africans will learn to appreciate each other's art forms, and forge new forms of their own.
  6. He said new efforts to forge a compromise were motivated in part by "anxiety over a deficit that is fighting every reduction attempt that we can come up with." "The participants agreed on two or three kind of basic operating principles.
  7. Seven people testified Mountain bought them beer and showed them how to forge signatures on the petitions.
  8. When W.J. Usery entered the bitter Pittston Coal strike he was called a "supermediator," a term that seems particularly appropriate with both labor and management praising the agreement he helped to forge.
  9. Mr. Yeltsin had sought to use disgruntlement with Mr. Gorbachev's initial version to forge an alternative treaty that would bypass the Kremlin.
  10. They had gone so far as to forge endorsement signatures on checks made out to the BBBs, the suit claims.
  11. In the 21 years since he seized power, Gadhafi has tried and failed to forge various mergers with many North African nations.
  12. It also allows them to forge associations nationally and internationally. Surely an enlightened electorate and responsive global democracy is worth striving for. But the era of increased interactivity poses two main challenges to government and the media.
  13. Brian Thomson, a descendant of a Scot who helped build Argentina's railways (currently costing the government over $1 billion a year), is trying to forge a similarly radical change.
  14. Lee helped forge an identity for his polyglot island of 2.7 million people, uniting an ethnic Chinese majority with sizable Malay and Indian minorities.
  15. Dr. Robert Hutter, chairman of the cancer society's national advisory commiteee on cancer prevention and detection, said the new recommendation is an attempt to forge a consensus among various medical groups.
  16. Vietnam and Cambodia are to blame for the failure of a 19-nation peace conference on Cambodia to forge an agreement over how to end the conflict between rival warring actions, the Bush administration says.
  17. Christian Democrat Alfred Gomulka, who won the vote for governor in Mecklenburg-Lower Pomerania, said he may try to forge a "grand coalition" to include the Social Democrats.
  18. It's been savaged over the past seven years." Gore says he would "convene a summit of our nation's leaders on economics to forge a national consensus on how best to tackle our budget deficit."
  19. But in their first official meeting since the Soviet Union's formal collapse, the two men didn't forge any new agreements on specific arms control or economic issues between their countries.
  20. In all markets, pressures work to forge a marriage of supply and demand.
  21. "When you put any organization through a rigorous situation, they're going to learn and it's going to forge them into a more cohesive unit and they learn how to work with adversity.
  22. Although it's thinking about linking loan guarantees to the settlements issue, the Bush administration isn't considering using the guarantees as leverage in its stalled efforts to forge a broader Arab-Israeli peace.
  23. Hussein's decision is expected to force Jordan to forge a new identity for itself, one in which Hassan likely would play a role because of his leadership of the kingdom's economic and research institutions.
  24. Boeing has clearly been unhappy over Airbus attempts to forge a close relationship with the Japanese manufacturers. Boeing's Mr Hayhurst believes there will be room for only one super jumbo programme.
  25. "Given the war-torn history of this century we should redouble our efforts to forge a new century of peace and freedom," said Bush, who taped his message in Washington before going to Texas on vacation last week.
  26. Rep. Leath helped to forge the budget compromise and then served as emissary to his Southern colleagues on its behalf.
  27. A failed plan in the 1970s to build a resort by the pyramids of Egypt helped him forge ties with Arab financiers.
  28. The stock swap represents a further step in the food retailers' effort to forge links ahead of the European Community's planned single market in 1992.
  29. Despite doubts raised by others, officials at NASA say they will forge ahead with plans for the advanced version.
  30. Although Mr. Scannell isn't yet in a position to make OSHA decisions, OSHA and Labor Department people benefit from his expertise and counsel as they brief him on issues and forge ahead on their own in regulatory actions.
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