chimney
chim·ney [chimney chimneys] BrE [ˈtʃɪmni] NAmE [ˈtʃɪmni] noun 1. a structure through which smoke or steam is carried up away from a fire, etc. and through the roof of a building; the part of this that is above the roof •He threw a bit of paper onto the fire and it flew up the chimney. •the factory chimneys of an industrial landscape 2. (technical)a narrow opening in an area of rock that a person can climb up Word Origin: Middle English (denoting a fireplace or furnace): from Old French cheminee ‘chimney, fireplace’, from late Latin caminata, perhaps from camera caminata ‘room with a fireplace’, from Latin caminus ‘forge, furnace’, from Greek kaminos ‘oven’. Example Bank: •This chimney doesn't draw very well. •factory chimneys belching smoke over the town
|
|