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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Swage

Swage \Swage\, v. t. & i. [imp. & p. p. Swaged; p. pr. & vb. n. Swaging.] [Equiv. to suage, abbrev. fr. assuage.] See Assuage. [Obs.]

Swage

Swage \Swage\, n. A tool, variously shaped or grooved on the end or face, used by blacksmiths and other workers in metals, for shaping their work, whether sheet metal or forging, by holding the swage upon the work, or the work upon the swage, and striking with a sledge.

Swage block, a perforated block of iron, having grooved sides and adapted for use in heading bolts and swaging objects of large size.

Swage

Swage \Swage\, v. t. To shape by means of a swage; to fashion, as a piece of iron, by forcing it into a groove or mold having the required shape.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
swage

"to shape or bend by use of a tool," 1831, from swage (n.), also swedge, "tool or die for bending cold metal" (1812), from French suage, according to Century Dictionary from suer "to sweat." Uncertain connection to swage "ornamental moulding" (late 14c.), from Old French souage (Modern French suage), which, according to Klein, is from soue "rope," from Vulgar Latin *soca, probably of Gaulish origin (compare Breton sug "cord").

Wiktionary
swage

Etymology 1 n. A tool, used by blacksmiths and other metalworkers, for cold shaping of a metal item. vb. To bend or shape through use of a swage. Etymology 2

vb. (obsolete form of assuage English)

WordNet
swage
  1. n. a tool used to thicken or spread (the end of a bar or a rivet etc.) by forging or hammering or swaging [syn: upset]

  2. v. form metals with a swage [syn: upset]

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "swage".

Whether the swaging is harder or the mental concentration to avoid suffusing the raw metal with order is more difficult, he is not sure, only that he is sweating from more than the heat of the smithy when he is through.

Vithig showed no such inhibitions, swaging it down as if it were water.

Jan and Vithig showed no such inhibitions, swaging it down as if it were water.

Now he learned the fine points of swaging, and how to get the set so even, the cut surface was as smooth as if planed.

Jayge replied, selecting the iron bar, already fullered and swaged, and crunching off the length he needed.

When the cross-section matches the template, he sets the circular die-almost like a round-bottom swage with a square base-into the anvil's hardie hole, and places the metal in the forge once more.

And this is the hardie hole, where I rest the butt of the fuller and the flatter and the swage.

In time he removes the piece and places it in the end curve in the swage block.

He'd used commercial 148-grain wadcutter bullets, swaged from pure lead instead of being cast with an alloy to harden them, ahead of three grains of Bullseye, a powder fast enough to burn almost completely within the snubbie's short barrel.

The swaged soft-tip bullet and the hand loaded cartridge looked perfect.

Some he recognizes, like the standard hammers, swages, fullers, and punches laid out on the hearth edge in easy reach.

I also have some hot sets and some forks and swages and fullers-but not nearly enough.

Hammers stood in their stands, tongs of various kinds and sizes hung on the exposed joists of the walls, buttresses and hoof knives and other farrier’s tools lay neatly arranged on wooden benches with chisels and beak irons and swages and all the implements of the blacksmith’s craft.

Tongs, swages, punches, chisels, anvil dies, and clamps in a multitude of sizes and shapes sat draped in cobwebs, dust, and rust.