Bubble vs Bubbe - What's the difference?
bubble | bubbe |
A spherically contained volume of air or other gas, especially one made from soapy liquid.
A small spherical cavity in a solid material.
Anything resembling a hollow sphere.
(economics) A period of intense speculation in a market, causing prices to rise quickly to irrational levels as the metaphorical bubble expands, and then fall even more quickly as the bubble bursts (eg the ).
(obsolete) Someone who has been ‘bubbled’ or fooled; a dupe.
* Prior
* 1749 , Henry Fielding, Tom Jones , Folio Society 1979, p. 15:
(figurative) The emotional and/or physical atmosphere in which the subject is immersed; circumstances, ambience.
* {{quote-news, year=2012
, date=June 3
, author=Nathan Rabin
, title=TV: Review: THE SIMPSONS (CLASSIC): “Mr. Plow” (season 4, episode 9; originally aired 11/19/1992)
* {{quote-news, year=2011
, date=January 23
, author=Alistair Magowan
, title=Blackburn 2 - 0 West Brom
, work=BBC
(Cockney rhyming slang) a Greek (also: bubble and squeak)
A small, hollow, floating bead or globe, formerly used for testing the strength of spirits.
The globule of air in the spirit tube of a level.
Anything lacking firmness or solidity; a cheat or fraud; an empty project.
* Shakespeare
(Cockney rhyming slang) A laugh. (also: bubble bath)
To produce bubbles, to rise up in bubbles (such in foods cooking).
(archaic) To cheat, delude.
* 1749 , Henry Fielding, Tom Jones , Folio Society 1973, p. 443:
* Addison
* Sterne
(intransitive, Scotland, and, Northern England) To cry, weep.
One's grandmother.
* 1994 : Steven C. Dubin, Arresting Images , p x.
* 1996': Joan C. Hawxhurst, '''''Bubbe & Gram: My Two Grandmothers , blurb
* 1999 : Linda Barnes, A Trouble of Fools , p1
* 2001 : Elizabeth Sussman Nassau, Raisins and Almonds'', in ''Chicken Soup for the Jewish Soul (Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, Dov Peretz Elkins, eds.), p238
Any elderly woman.
* 1979 Stephen Longstreet, The Dream Seekers , ISBN 0523405014, page 174:
As nouns the difference between bubble and bubbe
is that bubble is a spherically contained volume of air or other gas, especially one made from soapy liquid while bubbe is one's grandmother.As a verb bubble
is to produce bubbles, to rise up in bubbles (such in foods cooking).bubble
English
(wikipedia bubble)Noun
(en noun)- bubbles in window glass, or in a lens
- Granny's a cheat, and I'm a bubble .
- For no woman, sure, will plead the passion of love for an excuse. This would be to own herself the mere tool and bubble of the man.
citation, page= , passage=He’s wrapped up snugly in a cozy bubble of self-regard, talking for his own sake more than anyone else’s.}}
citation, page= , passage=Thomas, so often West Brom's most positive attacker down their left side and up against Salgado, twice almost burst the bubble of excitement around the ground but he had two efforts superbly saved by Robinson.}}
- Then a soldier / Seeking the bubble reputation / Even in the cannon's mouth.
- Are you having a bubble ?!
Synonyms
* (a laugh) giraffe, bubble bathVerb
(bubbl)- No, no, friend, I shall never be bubbled out of my religion in hopes only of keeping my place under another government
- She has bubbled him out of his youth.
- The great Locke, who was seldom outwitted by false sounds, was nevertheless bubbled here.
Quotations
* (English Citations of "bubble")Derived terms
* bubble over * bubble upbubbe
English
Alternative forms
* bubbie * bobbe * bobeh * bubby * bubeNoun
(en noun)- My bubbe' s inability to write in English turned out to be a blessing: she pressed me into service as her scribe at an early age.
- A little girl describes the various things she does with her Jewish grandmother, Bubbe , and her Christian grandmother, Gram, and what she has learned about both.
- I never met my bubbe , my grandma, the source of all my mother's Yiddish proverbs ...
- When I showed my bubbe , she said I had found a memory of the snake, and that memories were precious.
- "You heard the bubbe ," said Josie. "There isn't any. You act up and cry and I'll give you the back of my hand."
