Smithy

Etymology
From smiþþe, from Common Germanic *smiðjon, whence also Old   Norse smiðja.

Noun

 * 1) The location where a smith (particularly a blacksmith) works, a forge.
 * Traditionally a village smithy was a busy place because the smith's work was so necessary.

Verb

 * 1)  to forge, especially by hand
 * 2) * 1995, John Francis Campbell, The Celtic Dragon Myth, page 59:
 * So the old smith went out to his smithy and weighed out iron enough to make a stout staff a stone weight, and he smithied it well while his son looked on. So they weighed six stone of iron and smithied a great bent club like a shinny, and when that was made and cooled the smith's son said, "that will do."

Translations

 * Finnish: takoa

smithy fa:smithy smithy smithy smithy smithy smithy smithy smithy smithy