ebuliar
Ido
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin ēbulliō (“boil, bubble up”).
Verb
ebuliar (present tense ebulias, past tense ebuliis, future tense ebulios, imperative ebuliez, conditional ebulius)
- (intransitive) to bubble, bubble up, seethe, froth (of water, etc.)
- (intransitive, figuratively) to overflow with passion
Conjugation
| present | past | future | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| infinitive | ebuliar | ebuliir | ebulior | ||||
| tense | ebulias | ebuliis | ebulios | ||||
| conditional | ebulius | — | — | ||||
| imperative | ebuliez | — | — | ||||
| adjective active participle | ebulianta | ebuliinta | ebulionta | ||||
| adverbial active participle | ebuliante | ebuliinte | ebulionte | ||||
| nominal active participle |
singular | ebulianto | ebuliinto | ebulionto | |||
| plural | ebulianti | ebuliinti | ebulionti | ||||
Synonyms
- (to froth): spumifar
Derived terms
- ebulieskar (“to bubble”)
- ebuliigar (“to bubble”, transitive verb)