Farrier is now usually applied specifically to a blacksmith who specializes in shoeing horses, a skill that requires not only the ability to shape and fit horseshoes, but also the ability to clean, trim, and shape a horse's hooves. When farrier first appeared in English (as ferrour), it referred to someone who not only shoed horses, but who provided general veterinary care for them as well. Middle English ferrour was borrowed from the Anglo-French word of the same form, which referred to a blacksmith who shoes horses. That word derives from the verb ferrer ("to shoe horses"), which can ultimately be traced back to Latin ferrum, meaning "iron."
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Brennan reported that the nurses on horseback also had a farrier on site to aid any horses in case they got hurt on the rough terrain.—Catherine Jessee, Southern Living, 4 Oct. 2024 Each officer owns and cares for their horse at their own expense, which includes food, boarding, veterinary care and farrier service (putting on horseshoes).—Lou Ponsi, Orange County Register, 30 July 2024 Timmy Kriz, a farrier and eighth-generation farmer, runs the farm along with his son, farrier son, Cody, 31.—Pamela McLoughlin, Hartford Courant, 29 Apr. 2024 Bennett had a previous career as a farrier and spends his summers competing in local ranch rodeos.—Jacob Spetzler, The Denver Post, 19 Apr. 2024 See all Example Sentences for farrier
Word History
Etymology
alteration of Middle English ferrour, from Anglo-French ferrour blacksmith, from ferrer to shoe (horses), from Vulgar Latin *ferrare, from Latin ferrum iron
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