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REFURBISH
verb rih-FER-bish
What It Means
To refurbish something is to brighten or freshen it up, or to repair and make improvements to it.
// They are refurbishing the old house with the hopes of selling it for a profit.
// The store refurbishes and sells computers that can often meet the needs of those who don’t need the latest technology.
REFURBISH in Context
“The city of San Diego is tasked with completing the building and replanting the interior plants, which are currently in storage. Meanwhile, the city’s not-for-profit partner Forever Balboa Park is responsible for financing and completing phase-two improvements. Those include remaking the exterior gardens, improving walkways, reconstructing the pergola that was on the west lawn and refurbishing the fountains.” — Jennifer Van Grove, The San Diego Union-Tribune, 17 Jan. 2024
Did You Know?
As seems proper given how English prefixes work, before you could refurbish something you could furbish it. That shorter word was borrowed into Middle English in the 14th century from Anglo-French as furbisshen; it shares a distant relative with the Old High German verb furben, meaning “to polish.” In its earliest uses furbish also meant “to polish,” but it developed an extended sense of “to renovate” shortly before English speakers created refurbish with the same meaning in the 17th century. These days refurbish is the more common of the two words, although furbish does continue to be used.
Merriam Webster Dictionary