BOLLYADJ.
covered with bubbles ...1582 obs. rare NOUN 1. a bogy, a hobgoblin ...1724 obs. exc. Eng. dial. 2. pudding, esp. if boiled ...c1860 Brit. school sl. obs. 3. 'Bollinger' champagne ...1982 Brit. sl. ETYMOLOGY for adj.: from 'boll', a vesicle or bubble (obs.) for n. 1.: diminutive of 'boll', an apparition, an object of fear (Eng. dial.) for n. 2.: possibly from French bouillie boiled FIRST DOCUMENTED USE 1582 - See example below EXAMPLE "...the winde maketh the over parte of water bolly and uneuen." From: Bartholomeus De Proprietatibus Rerum, Newly Corrected, Enlarged, and Amended By: Stephen Batman. 1582 SOURCES • A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles, James Murray, 1887-1933 • Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English, 8th Edition, Paul Beale, 2002 • Cassell's Dictionary of Slang, Jonathon Green, 2000
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