E / ē-bullĭo
verb transitive intransitive

ē-bullĭo

2nd PP ē-bullīre · conj. 4th
(and post-class. , , 1)
I
Neutr; to boil up; bubble up
Neutr., to boil up, bubble up (post-class.).
Lit.: fontium venae ebullant, Tert. de Pall. 2.—
to come forth bubbling; to appear boisterously figuratively
Trop., to come forth bubbling, to appear boisterously: dum risus ebullit App. M. 2, p. 128.—Poet.: o si Ebullit patrui praeclarum funus! i. e. utinam patruus moriatur, Pers. 2, 10 Dübner: priusquam hujus monstri idoli artifices ebullissent, Tert. Idol. 3: de Perside, to hurry confusedly away, Vulg. 2 Mac. 1, 12.—
Act. (class., but rare).
Act. (class., but rare).
Lit.: animam, i. e. to breathe out, give up the ghost, Sen. Apoc. 4, 2; Petr. 42, 3; 62, 10.—
To produce in abundance figuratively
To produce in abundance: et ebulliet fluvius ranas, Vulg. Exod. 8, 3; cf.: os fatuorum ebullit stultitiam, id. Prov. 15, 2.—Trop.: virtutes, i. e. to boast of, Cic. Tusc. 3, 18, 42 Kühn; cf. id. Fin. 5, 27, 80 (and the Gr. παφλάζειν).