gelee

See also: Gelee, gelée, and gélée

English

Etymology 1

From the French gelée. Doublet of jelly.

Alternative forms

Noun

gelee (countable and uncountable, plural gelees)

  1. 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

Etymology 2

Noun

gelee (plural gelees)

  1. Alternative form of gele (type of women’s headwrap).

Anagrams

Dutch

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɣəˈleː/
  • Hyphenation: ge‧lee
  • Rhymes: -eː

Adverb

gelee

  1. apocopic form of geleden

Middle English

Noun

gelee

  1. 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

    • (archaic) IPA(key): /d͡ʒəˈleːðə/
    • (classical) IPA(key): /d͡ʒəˈleːə/, /d͡ʒa-/

    Noun

    gelee oblique singularf (oblique plural gelees, nominative singular gelee, nominative plural gelees)

    1. cold spell; period of coldness

    Descendants

    • Bourguignon: jailée, gellée
    • Champenois: geulée
    • Franc-Comtois: dgeolaie
    • French: gelée
    • Lorrain: djalâie, djalauïe
    • Walloon: djalêye
    • Middle English: gele, jelyf, gelly, gelye, gelle, gelee, gely

    References