The word "furnish" has an intriguing etymological backstory: it is a Germanic word in French clothing. It entered English around 1460 from Old French "furniss-" (the present participle stem of "furnir," to provide, to equip, to accomplish), which came not from Latin but from Frankish *frumjan (to provide, to carry out). The Frankish word descended from Proto-Germanic *frumjaną (to further, to promote, to accomplish), from *frumô (advantage, benefit).
This Germanic origin makes "furnish" one of many words that traveled a roundabout path: born in Germanic, adopted into Gallo-Romance when the Franks conquered Gaul, reshaped by Old French, and finally borrowed into English after the Norman Conquest. The word went from Germanic to Romance and back to a Germanic language, accumulating French phonology along the way.
In its earliest English usage, "furnish" meant simply to provide, supply, or equip — with no specific connection to furniture. One could furnish an army with weapons, furnish a person with information, or furnish a ship with supplies. This broader sense survives in formal English: "to furnish evidence," "to furnish proof," "to furnish an explanation."
The narrower sense — to equip a house or room with furniture and decorations — developed during the 16th century. Even then, "furniture" itself had a much broader meaning than it does today. In the 16th and 17th centuries, "furniture" meant any kind of equipment, gear, or accessory. A soldier's furniture was his armor and weapons. A
The derivative "furnishing" (usually in the plural, "furnishings") covers a broader range than "furniture" — it includes curtains, carpets, cushions, and other soft goods alongside the hard items that constitute furniture proper. Interior designers distinguish between "furniture" (the major movable pieces) and "furnishings" (the complete ensemble including textiles and accessories).
"Refurbish" combines "re-" (again) with an altered form of "furnish" — to refurbish is to renovate or restore, to furnish again. The word gained new life in the tech industry, where "refurbished" electronics are used devices that have been repaired and restored to working condition.
The related word "veneer" has a contested etymology, but one theory traces it to Old French "fournir" through a dialectal variant — a veneer being a thin layer of fine material furnished over a cheaper base. Whether or not this etymology is correct, the connection captures the idea of furnishing a surface with an attractive covering.
In French, "fournir" retained its broader meaning of providing or supplying. A "fournisseur" is a supplier or vendor. Italian "fornire" similarly means to provide or supply, while "mobili" (literally "movables") is the Italian word for furniture — reflecting a different metaphor, where furniture is defined by its portability rather than its function of equipping a room.
The concept of "a furnished apartment" (or "furnished flat" in British English) — rented accommodation that comes with furniture already in place — dates from the 19th century and remains a standard real estate category. The opposite, "unfurnished," paradoxically implies not just the absence of furniture but the expectation that the tenant will furnish the space themselves.
From equipping medieval armies to decorating modern apartments, "furnish" has maintained its core sense of providing what is needed — a Germanic word that passed through French hands and emerged as one of English's most domestically useful verbs.