🔳 🔳 🔳


Primary

⁀➴

''hearth'' ▫ᴱᴺ|Definition|1st|20260615002359-00-⌔

hearth - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

🖼️ ➺

Noun

hearth (plural hearths)

  • The place in a home where a fire is or was traditionally kept for home heating and for cooking, usually constituted by at least a hearthstone and often enclosed to varying degrees by any combination of reredos, fireplace, oven, smoke hood, or chimney.
    • For by the hearth the children sit
      ⁠Cold in that atmosphere of Death,
      ⁠And scarce endure to draw the breath,
      Or like to noiseless phantoms flit: […]
      1
  • A hearthstone, either as standalone or as the floor of an enclosed fireplace or oven.
    • ✤ *cooking on an open hearth *
    • When the flames at last began to flicker and subside, his lids fluttered, then drooped; but he had lost all reckoning of time when he opened them again to find Miss Erroll in furs kneeling on the hearth and heaping kindling on the coals, and her pretty little Alsatian maid beside her, laying a log across the andirons.2
  • A fireplace: an open recess in a wall at the base of a chimney where a fire may be built.
  • The lowest part of a metallurgical furnace.
  • A brazier, chafing dish, or firebox.
  • (figurative) Home or family life.
    • To put it simply, he seems to me to be starting out to harm the city, from its very hearth, by setting out to wrong you.3
  • (Germanic paganism) A household or group in some forms of the modern pagan faith Heathenry.
    • Asatru is practised all over Northern Europe and also in North America. Like Druidry, it is organized into bodies with sub-groups, the hearths.4
    • Smaller localized groups known as ‘hearths’ meet regularly, and are comparable, in size and function, with a Wiccan ‘Coven’ or Druidic ‘Grove’.5
    • Neopagan groups take many forms, from Wiccan covens to Druid groves, from Heathen hearths to magical lodges […]6

Etymology

From Middle English herth, herthe, from Old English heorþ, from Proto-West Germanic ﹡herþ, from Proto-Germanic ﹡herþaz, possibly from Proto-Indo-European ﹡kerh₃- (“heat; fire”). Cognate with West Frisian hurd, Dutch haard, German Herd, Swedish härd.

The modern spelling is from an Middle English/Early Modern English/hɛːrθ/, from earlier/heːrθ/, levelled from inflected forms with/rð/where the vowel would have been lengthened.7 The reflex of this pronunciation was preserved in obsolete dialectal/ˈhɜɹθ/.

Pronunciation

  • (non-rhotic)
    • (Received Pronunciation) IPA: /ˈhɑːθ/, [ˈhɑːθ]
  • (rhotic)
    • (General American) IPA: /ˈhɑɹθ/, [ˈhɑɹθ]
  • (obsolete, dialectal)
    • IPA: /ˈhɜɹθ/, /ˈhæθ/8
  • Rhymes: -ɑː(ɹ)θ
  • Hyphenation: hearth
  • Homophone: heart (th-stopping)

Printed 2026-06-28.

(echo:: @ )

Footnotes

  1. 1850, [Alfred, Lord Tennyson], “Canto XX”, in In Memoriam, London: Edward Moxon, […], →OCLC, page 33:

  2. 1907 August, Robert W[illiam] Chambers, chapter III, in The Younger Set, New York, N.Y.: D. Appleton & Company, →OCLC:

  3. 2010, Plato, “Euthyphro”, in Christopher Rowe, transl., The Last Days of Socrates, Penguin Books Ltd., →ISBN, line 3a:

  4. 1996, Vivianne Crowley, Thorsons principles of paganism, page 50:

  5. 2003 December 8, Robert J. Wallis, Shamans/neo-Shamans: Ecstasy, Alternative Archaeologies, and Contemporary Pagans, page 102:

  6. 2004 March 1, Peter Clarke, editor, Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements, Routledge, page 768:

  7. Brunner, Karl (1960), “I. Vokalismus”, in Die Englische Sprache: Ihre Geschichtliche Entwicklung (Sammlung kurzer Grammatiken germanischer Dialekte; B: Ergänzungsreihe; 6) (in German), second revised edition, volume I, Tübingen: Max Niemeyer Verlag, →OCLC, Zweiter Teil: Lautgeschichte, page 333.

  8. Stanley, Oma (1937), “I. Vowel Sounds in Stressed Syllables”, in The Speech of East Texas (American Speech: Reprints and Monographs; 2), New York: Columbia University Press, →DOI, →ISBN, § 7, page 19.

Link to original

Secondary

• • •