hearth

listen to the pronunciation of hearth
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A household or group following the modern pagan faith of Heathenry
A symbol for home or family life
An open recess in a wall at the base of a chimney where a fire may be built
A brick, stone or cement floor to a fireplace or oven
The lowest part of a metallurgical furnace
{n} a place on which a fire is made
home symbolized as a part of the fireplace; "driven from hearth and home"; "fighting in defense of their firesides" an area near a fireplace (usually paved and extending out into a room); "they sat on the hearth and warmed themselves before the fire
The inner or out floor of a fireplace, usually made of brick, tile or stone
traditionally refers to the floor of a fireplace on which a blaze is built Today it is used to refer to all the devices and equipment used in connection with the fireplace and stove industry
A feature containing ash, charcoal, burned rock, or other evidence of fire kindled by people (Moratto 1984: 590)
an area near a fireplace (usually paved and extending out into a room); "they sat on the hearth and warmed themselves before the fire"
1 The masonry floor of a fireplace together with an adjacent area of incombustible material that may be a continuation of the flooring in the embrasure or some more decorate surfacing, as tile or marble See fireplace 2 An area permanently floored with incombustible material beneath and surrounding a stove
traditionally refers to the floor of a fireplace on which a blaze is built Today it is also used to refer to all the devices and equipment used in connection with the fireplace and the stove industry
the bottom lining of the crucible and casting arch of a blast furnace Usually the hearth was made of a slab of quartzite
The fireplace floor
The floor of a fireplace
The floor of a furnace, on which the material to be heated lies, or the lowest part of a melting furnace, into which the melted material settles
The house itself, as the abode of comfort to its inmates and of hospitality to strangers; fireside
an area near a fireplace (usually paved and extending out into a room); "they sat on the hearth and warmed themselves before the fire
The hearth is the floor of a fireplace, which sometimes extends into the room
The inner or outer floor of a fireplace, usually made of brick, tile, or stone
The pavement or floor of brick, stone, or metal in a chimney, on which a fire is made; the floor of a fireplace; also, a corresponding part of a stove
Traditionally refers to the floor of a fireplace on which a blaze is built Now also used to refer to all the devises and equipment used in connection with the fireplace and stove industry
{i} floor of a fireplace; symbol of home and family
an open recess in a wall at the base of a chimney where a fire can be built; "the fireplace was so large you could walk inside it"; "he laid a fire in the hearth and lit it"; "the hearth was black with the charcoal of many fires"
A fireplace, often circular and may be unlined, rock or clay-lined, or rock-filled
home symbolized as a part of the fireplace; "driven from hearth and home"; "fighting in defense of their firesides"
That part of a fireplace that holds the fuel and contains the fire
The inner floor of a fireplace, usually made of firebrick, stone or tiles
The source area of any innovation The source area from which an idea, crop, artifact, or good is diffused to other areas
The noncombustible surface protecting the floor from the fireplace opening Usually 20” deep and extending on each side of the opening Not required by code on some gas fireplaces Can be raised or flush with floor Usually made of same material as the surround
The fireproof surface of a fireplace, usually 18 inches wide
hearth and home
a symbol of traditional family values and home life
hearth tax
Any of several taxes levied in medieval Europe based on the number of hearths (fireplaces) in a property or community
hearth money
annual voluntary contribution that Roman Catholics give toward the expenses of the papal, Peter's pence
hearth money
an annual contribution made by Roman Catholics to support the Papal see
hearth rug
A hearth rug is a rug which is put in front of a fireplace
open-hearth
Describing a reverberatory furnace used to make high-quality steel
open-hearth
Designating the steel so produced
hearths
plural of hearth
open-hearth process
a process for making steel using an open-hearth furnace
open-hearth process
or Siemens-Martin process Steelmaking technique that for most of the 20th century accounted for most steel made in the world. William Siemens made steel from pig iron in a reverberatory furnace of his design in 1867. The same year the French manufacturer Pierre-Émile Martin (1824-1915) used the idea to produce steel by melting wrought iron with steel scrap. Siemens used the waste heat given off by the furnace: he directed the fumes from the furnace through a brick checkerwork, heating it to a high temperature, and then used the same path to introduce air into the furnace; the preheated air significantly increased the flame temperature. The open-hearth process furnace (which replaced the Bessemer process) has itself been replaced in most industrialized countries by the basic oxygen process and the electric furnace. See also reverberatory furnace
hearth

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    härth

    Telaffuz

    /ˈhärᴛʜ/ /ˈhɑːrθ/

    Etimoloji

    [ 'härth ] (noun.) before 12th century. Old English heorþ, from West Germanic *xerþaz, from Proto-Germanic *xer- (“burn, fire”), from Proto-Indo-European *ker- (“heat; fire”). Cognate with Dutch haard, German Herd, Swedish härd.