abubble
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From a- (“in such a state or condition”) + bubble.[1]
Pronunciation
[edit]Adjective
[edit]abubble (not comparable)
- In a state of excitement, agitated activity, or motion. [First attested in the 19th century.]
- After they had sat down, the party remained abubble until the speaker rose.
- 1885, Alexander Stewart, ’Twixt Ben Nevis and Glencoe, Edinburgh: William Paterson, Chapter 46, p. 337,[1]
- It was at times as if a score of tiny rainbows of the most brilliant hues were being rapidly interwoven, only to be instantly untwisted again, in order to be rewoven into a newer and still brighter pattern, in and over an acre of sea, all abubble and aboil with the gambols of the frolicsome shoal.
- 1913, Jack London, chapter 7, in John Barleycorn[2], New York: Century, page 64:
- The men in stripes worked a shorter day than I at my machine. And there was vastly more romance in being an oyster pirate or a convict than in being a machine slave. And behind it all, behind all of me with youth a-bubble, whispered Romance, Adventure.
- 1944, Ernie Pyle, chapter 30, in Brave Men,[3], New York: Henry Holt, page 409:
- When we left the restaurant he was all abubble and said over and over again that he’d had the best time that evening he had ever had in the Army.
- 1979, William Styron, chapter 13, in Sophie’s Choice[4], New York: Random House, page 381:
- Dr. Walter Dürrfeld […] a director of IG Farbenindustrie, that […] conglomerate—inconceivably huge even for its day—whose prestige and size are alone enough to set Professor Biegański’s mind abubble with giddy euphoria.
- Bubbling.
- The sour mash was abubble.
- 1869, William Alexander, “Specimen of a Translation of Virgil”, in Afternoon Lectures on Literature and Art[5], Dublin: William McGee, page 345:
- Part haste the boiling caldron all a-bubble,
Synonyms
[edit]- (bubbling): bubblesome, bubbly, ebullient; see also Thesaurus:effervescent
Adverb
[edit]abubble (not comparable)
- Bubbling over with excitement. [First attested in the mid 20th century.][1]
Related terms
[edit]References
[edit]- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Lesley Brown, editor-in-chief, William R. Trumble and Angus Stevenson, editors (2002), “abubble”, in The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary on Historical Principles, 5th edition, Oxford, New York, N.Y.: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 10.