bullire
61parboiled — par|boiled [ pɑ:bɔild] <verkürzt aus gleichbed. engl. parboiled (rice) zu to parboil »halb gar kochen«, dies über älter fr. parboillir, parboullir aus spätlat. perbullire zu ↑per... u. lat. bullire »sprudeln, wallen«> (von Reis) in… …
62boil — ‘large spot’ [OE] and boil ‘vaporize with heat’ [13] are distinct words. The former comes from Old English byl or byle, which became bile in Middle English; the change to boil started in the 15th century, perhaps from association with the verb.… …
63bullion — [14] The immediate source of bullion was Anglo Norman bullion, which meant ‘place where coins are made, mint’, so presumably the underlying connotation is of melting, or ‘boiling’, metal down and then turning it into coins. On this reasoning it… …
64Boiler — Sm Gerät zur Bereitung von heißem Wasser erw. fach. (19. Jh.) Entlehnung. Entlehnt aus ne. boiler, einem Nomen instrumenti zu ne. boil kochen, erhitzen , aus afrz. bolir, aus l. bullīre (eigentlich Blasen werfen ), einer Ableitung von l. bulla f …
65Bouillon — Sf std. (18. Jh.) Entlehnung. Entlehnt aus frz. bouillon m., einer Ableitung von frz. bouillir sieden , dieses aus l. bullīre (eigentlich Blasen werfen ), zu l. bulla Blase (usw.) . Das deutsche Wort erscheint als Femininum, wohl im Anschluß an… …
66boil — {{11}}boil (n.) hard tumor, altered from M.E. bile (Kentish bele), perhaps by association with the verb; from O.E. byl, byle boil, carbuncle, from W.Gmc. *buljon swelling (Cf. O.Fris. bele, O.H.G. bulia, Ger. Beule). Perhaps ultimately from PIE… …
67budge — (v.) 1580s, from M.Fr. bougier to move, stir (Mod.Fr. bouger), from V.L. *bullicare to bubble, boil (hence, to be in motion ), from L. bullire to boil (see BOIL (Cf. boil) (v.)). Related: Budged; budging …
68bullion — early 15c., uncoined gold or silver, from Anglo Norm. bullion bar of precious metal, also place where coins are made, mint, perhaps, through the notion of melting, from O.Fr. boillir to boil, from L. bullire boil. But perhaps it is rather from… …
69ebullient — 1590s, boiling, from L. ebullientem (nom. ebulliens), prp. of ebullire to boil over, literally and figuratively, from ex out (see EX (Cf. ex )) + bullire to bubble (see BOIL (Cf. boil) (v.)). Figurative sense of enthusiastic …
70parboil — (v.) late 14c., from O.Fr. parboillir, from M.L. perbullire to boil thoroughly, from L. per through, thoroughly + bullire to boil (see BOIL (Cf. boil) (v.)). Main modern meaning boil partially (mid 15c.) is by mistaken association of the prefix… …