veneeryoudaoicibaDictYouDict[veneer 词源字典]
veneer: [17] Veneer is ultimately the same word as furnish. Both come from Old French fournir, but veneer was routed via German, which borrowed fournir as furniren. The verbal noun derived from this, furnirung, was borrowed into English as faneering in the highly specialized sense ‘provision of a thin surface layer of fine wood’. The noun veneer was a back-formation from this.
=> furnish[veneer etymology, veneer origin, 英语词源]
veneer (n.)youdaoicibaDictYouDict
1702, from German Furnier, from furnieren "to cover with a veneer, inlay," from French fournir "to furnish, accomplish," from Middle French fornir "to furnish," from a Germanic source (compare Old High German frumjan "to provide;" see furnish). From German to French to German to English. Figurative sense of "mere outward show of some good quality" is attested from 1868.
veneer (v.)youdaoicibaDictYouDict
1728 (earlier fineer, 1708), from German furnieren (see veneer (n.)). Related: Veneered; veneering.