gelee
English
Etymology 1
From the French gelée. Doublet of jelly.
Alternative forms
Noun
gelee (countable and uncountable, plural gelees)
- Any gelled suspension made for culinary purposes.
- 2006, Poppy Z. Brite, chapter 19, in Soul Kitchen: A Novel (Rickey and G-man; 4), New York, N.Y.: Three Rivers Press, →ISBN, page 257:
- While they were puzzling over it, another course arrived: three tiny monkey dishes, each holding two cubes of gelee, set atop glass bowls in which live Siamese fighting fish swam listlessly back and forth.
Translations
any gelled suspension made for culinary purposes
Etymology 2
Noun
gelee (plural gelees)
- Alternative form of gele (“type of women’s headwrap”).
Anagrams
Dutch
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɣəˈleː/
- Hyphenation: ge‧lee
- Rhymes: -eː
Adverb
gelee
- apocopic form of geleden
Middle English
Noun
gelee
- alternative form of gele
Old French
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Early Medieval Latin gelāta, derived from Latin gelāre. By surface analysis, geler + -ee. Cognate with Old Galician-Portuguese geada.
Pronunciation
Noun
gelee oblique singular, f (oblique plural gelees, nominative singular gelee, nominative plural gelees)
Descendants
References
- gelee on the Anglo-Norman On-Line Hub
- Walther von Wartburg (1928–2002) “gĕlāre”, in Französisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch, volume 4: G H I, page 86