Word Meanings - SEETHE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To decoct or prepare for food in hot liquid; to boil; as, to seethe flesh. Set on the great pot, and seethe pottage for the sons of the prophets. 2 Kings iv. 38. (more info) sieden, OHG. siodan, G. sieden, Icel. sj, Sw. sjuda, Dan. syde, Goth.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of SEETHE)
Related words: (words related to SEETHE)
- FERMENTABLE
Capable of fermentation; as, cider and other vegetable liquors are fermentable. - FESTERMENT
A festering. Chalmers. - FERMENT
fervimentum, fr. fervere to be boiling hot, boil, ferment: cf. F. 1. That which causes fermentation, as yeast, barm, or fermenting beer. Note: Ferments are of two kinds: Formed or organized ferments. Unorganized or structureless ferments. The - CONCOCTER
One who concocts. - EFFERVESCENCE; EFFERVESCENCY
A kind of natural ebullition; that commotion of a fluid which takes place when some part of the mass flies off in a gaseous form, producing innumerable small bubbles; as, the effervescence of a carbonate with citric acid. - CHAFER
1. One who chafes. 2. A vessel for heating water; -- hence, a dish or pan. A chafer of water to cool the ends of the irons. Baker. - SMOLDERINGNESS; SMOULDERINGNESS
The state of smoldering. - CHAFERY
An open furnace or forge, in which blooms are heated before being wrought into bars. - SEETHER
A pot for boiling things; a boiler. Like burnished gold the little seether shone. Dryden. - CHAFEWAX; CHAFFWAX
Formerly a chancery officer who fitted wax for sealing writs and other documents. - EFFERVESCENT
Gently boiling or bubbling, by means of the disengagement of gas - SMOLDERING; SMOULDERING
Being in a state of suppressed activity; quiet but not dead. Some evil chance Will make the smoldering scandal break and blaze. Tennyson. - FERMENTATION
1. The process of undergoing an effervescent change, as by the action of yeast; in a wider sense , the transformation of an organic substance into new compounds by the action of a ferment, either formed or unorganized. It differs in kind according - CHAFEWEED
The cudweed , used to prevent or cure chafing. - SIMMER
To boil gently, or with a gentle hissing; to begin to boil. I simmer as liquor doth on the fire before it beginneth to boil. Palsgrave. (more info) Etym: - FESTER
1. To generate pus; to become imflamed and suppurate; as, a sore or a wound festers. Wounds immedicable Rankle, and fester, and gangrene. Milton. Unkindness may give a wound that shall bleed and smart, but it is treachery that makes it fester. - RANKLE
Etym: 1. To become, or be, rank; to grow rank or strong; to be inflamed; to fester; -- used literally and figuratively. A malady that burns and rankles inward. Rowe. This would have left a rankling wound in the hearts of the people. Burke. 2. To - SMOLDER; SMOULDER
1. To burn and smoke without flame; to waste away by a slow and supressed combustion. The smoldering dust did round about him smoke. Spenser. 2. To exist in a state of suppressed or smothered activity; to burn inwardly; as, a smoldering feud. - CHAFE
calfacere, to make warm; calere to be warm + facere to make. See 1. To ecxite heat in by friction; to rub in order to stimulate and make warm. To rub her temples, and to chafe her skin. Spenser. 2. To excite passion or anger in; to fret; - SEETHE
To decoct or prepare for food in hot liquid; to boil; as, to seethe flesh. Set on the great pot, and seethe pottage for the sons of the prophets. 2 Kings iv. 38. (more info) sieden, OHG. siodan, G. sieden, Icel. sj, Sw. sjuda, Dan. syde, Goth. - INEFFERVESCENT
Not effervescing, or not susceptible of effervescence; quiescent. - PREFERMENT
1. The act of choosing, or the state of being chosen; preference. Natural preferment of the one . . . before the other. Sir T. Browne. 2. The act of preferring, or advancing in dignity or office; the state of being advanced; promotion. Neither - COCKCHAFER
A beetle of the genus Melolontha and allied genera; -- called also May bug, chafer, or dorbeetle. - CRANKLE
To break into bends, turns, or angles; to crinkle. Old Veg's stream . . . drew her humid train aslope, Crankling her banks. J. Philips. - ENFESTER
To fester. "Enfestered sores." Davies . - INFESTER
One who, or that which, infests. - ENCHAFE
To chafe; to enrage; to heat. Shak. - RE-FERMENT
To ferment, or cause to ferment, again. Blackmore.