VARNISH


Meaning of VARNISH in English

I. ˈvärnish, ˈvȧn-, -nēsh noun

( -es ; see sense 4 )

Etymology: Middle English vernisch, from Middle French vernis, from Old Italian or Medieval Latin; Old Italian vernice, from Medieval Latin veronice, veronic-, veronix sandarac (resin), from Greek berenikē, probably from Berenikē Berenice (now Benghazi), city in Cyrenaica

1.

a. : a liquid preparation that when spread upon a surface dries by evaporation or oxidation forming a hard lustrous coating that is more or less transparent unless pigments have been added and serves for decoration and protection — see oil varnish , spirit varnish ; japan , lacquer , shellac ; compare enamel 3

b. : the covering, coating, or glaze given by the application of varnish

seemed to be like a painting cleaned of later restorations and varnishes — Erwin Rosenthal

c. : the act of applying this substance to a surface

d. : something that resembles or suggests varnish by its gloss

the varnish of the holly and ivy — T.B.Macaulay

2. : an artificial covering to give a pleasing or conventional appearance to action or conduct : an embellishing feature : outside show : gloss

absence of literary varnish — Frederic Morton

concealed, under a varnish of conventionality … a nature throbbing with passion — Norman Douglas

3.

a. : thickened linseed oil with which pigments are ground to form the ink used in lithography

b. : ground 3g

4. plural varnish slang

a. : a through passenger train or car

ride the varnish

a varnish conductor

b. : a highly varnished wooden passenger car

the last such varnish ever to roll over the Carson meadows — Lucius Beebe & C.M.Clegg

5. chiefly Britain : nail polish

6. : a deposit formed in engines by oxidation and polymerization of fuels and lubricants

II. “, esp in pres part -nəsh verb

( -ed/-ing/-es )

Etymology: Middle English vernischen, from Middle French vernisser, from vernis varnish

transitive verb

1. : to apply varnish to : cover with a thin coating of a liquid that when dry produces a hard glossy surface

varnish a table

varnish a painting

— often used with over

varnish over a surface

2. : to coat over with something resembling or likened to varnish : cover or conceal with something that gives a fair appearance : gloss over

a manner highly varnished, a blend of cool bluff and right thinking — Francis Hackett

never imagine that anything you can say yourself will varnish your defects — Earl of Chesterfield

one that degraded art, and varnished vice — Robert Bridges †1930

3. : adorn , embellish

beauty doth varnish age — Shakespeare

intransitive verb

: to apply varnish

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.