aboil

adj
/əˈbɔɪl/US

Etymology

From a- (“in, on”) + boil.

  1. inherited from *būlijō
  2. inherited from bȳl
  3. inherited from bile
  4. prefixed as aboil — “a + boil

Definitions

  1. In a boil

    In a boil; boiling.

    • The cooking, I can tell you, kept her nose to the pot, and even if there was nothing in it, even though there was no pot, she had to keep watching that it came aboil just the same.
    • Being a devotee of the Johnny Weismuller school of Tarzaning, no wasp-waisted cartoon character can get my blood aboil.
    • The stove is full, with corned beef asimmer in one pot, cabbage aboil in another, and vegetable soup asteam in a third.
  2. Heated up

    Heated up; excited.

    • He plugged on steadily, unmindful of where he was going. He was aboil with perturbation.
    • At ten o’clock on the morning of his third visit, Pablo found himself aboil with rage and sweat, glaring into the druggist’s thick horn-rimmed spectacles in an attempt to engage the dead bug eyes behind them.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for aboil. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA