bolgia
English
Etymology
Unadapted borrowing from Italian bolgia (“ditch, trench”), from Old French bolge, bouge, from Late Latin bulga (“wallet, purse”), from Gaulish bolgā, from Proto-Celtic *bolgos (“sack, bag”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *bʰelǵʰ- (“to swell”). Doublet of budge and bulge.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈboʊldʒə/
Noun
bolgia (plural bolgias or bolge)
- Any of the divisions of the eighth circle of Hell, Malebolge, in Dante's Divine Comedy.
Anagrams
Italian
Etymology
Probably borrowed from Old French bolge, bouge, from Late Latin bulga (“wallet, purse”) (or less likely directly from an adjectival form bulgea), from Gaulish bolgā, from Proto-Celtic *bolgos (“sack, bag”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *bʰelǵʰ- (“to swell”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈbɔl.d͡ʒa/
- Rhymes: -ɔldʒa
- Hyphenation: bòl‧gia
Noun
bolgia f (plural bolge)
- (archaic) a bag, a pouch, especially one which opens longways
- (archaic) a ditch, a trench, a hole in the ground
- a bolgia (division in Dante's Inferno)
- 1308–1321, Dante Alighieri (translated by Robert and Jean Hollander, 2000), Commedìa (The Inferno), canto 23, lines 31–33:
- S'elli è che sì la destra costa giaccia,
che noi possiam ne l'altra bolgia scendere,
noi fuggirem l'imaginata caccia.- If the slope there to the right allows us
to make our way into the other ditch,
we shall escape the chase we both envision.
- If the slope there to the right allows us
- 1308–1321, Dante Alighieri (translated by Robert and Jean Hollander, 2000), Commedìa (The Inferno), canto 23, lines 31–33:
- (figuratively) a mob or crowd of people in a confined space; a bedlam