jelly
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
English
Alternative forms
- gelly (obsolete)
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
Etymology tree
From Middle English gele, borrowed from Old French gelee, borrowed from Early Medieval Latin gelāta, from Latin gelō + -āta. Doublet of gelee.
Noun
jelly (countable and uncountable, plural jellies)
- (Commonwealth) A dessert made by boiling gelatine (or a plant-based alternative such as agar or carrageenan), sugar and some flavouring (often derived from fruit) and allowing it to set.
- Synonym: (North America) jello
- (chiefly Canada, US) A clear or translucent fruit preserve, made from fruit juice and set using either naturally occurring, or added, pectin.
- Synonym: (Commonwealth) jam
- 1945, Fannie Merritt Farmer and Wilma Lord Perkins (revisor), The Boston Cooking-School Cook Book, Eighth edition:
- Perfect jelly is of appetizing flavor; beautifully colored and translucent; tender enough to cut easily with a spoon, yet firm enough to hold its shape when turned from the glass.
- 1975, Irma S. Rombauer and Marion Rombauer Becker, The Joy of Cooking, 5th revision:
- Jelly has great clarity. Two cooking processes are involved. First, the juice alone is extracted from the fruit. Only that portion thin and clear enough to drip through a cloth is cooked with sugar until sufficiently firm to hold its shape. It is never stiff and never gummy.
- (Caribbean, Jamaica) Clipping of jelly coconut.
- A savoury substance, derived from meat, that has the same texture as the dessert.
- Any substance or object having the consistency of the dessert or preserve.
- calf's-foot jelly
- 1821, Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, volume 8, page 67:
- Sam floored him perpetually, and beat his face to a jelly, without getting a scratch.
- 1900 December – 1901 August, H[erbert] G[eorge] Wells, “chapter 24”, in The First Men in the Moon, London: George Newnes, […], published 1901, →OCLC:
- […] some of the profounder scholars are altogether too great for locomotion, and are carried from place to place in a sort of sedan tub, wabbling jellies of knowledge that enlist my respectful astonishment.
- (zoology) A jellyfish.
- 2014, Theo Tait, ‘Water-Borne Zombies’, London Review of Books, volume 36, number 5:
- Species of the phylum Cnidaria – the classic jelly – have existed in something close to their current form for at least 565 million years; Ctenophora, the comb jellies, are not much younger.
- (slang, now rare) A pretty girl; a girlfriend.
- 1931, William Faulkner, Sanctuary, Vintage, published 1993, page 25:
- ‘Gowan goes to Oxford a lot,’ the boy said. ‘He′s got a jelly there.’
- (US, slang) A large backside, especially a woman's.
- 2001, Destiny's Child, “Bootylicious” (song)
- I shake my jelly at every chance / When I whip with my hips you slip into a trance
- 2001, George Dell, Dance Unto the Lord, page 94:
- At that Sister Samantha seemed to shake her jelly so that she sank back into her chair.
- 2001, Destiny's Child, “Bootylicious” (song)
- (colloquial) Clipping of gelignite.
- (colloquial) A jelly shoe.
- 2006, David L. Marcus, What It Takes to Pull Me Through:
- Mary Alice gazed at a picture of herself wearing jellies and an oversized turquoise T-shirt that matched her eyes […]
- (colloquial, US) Blood.
Synonyms
Derived terms
- astral jelly
- blood jelly
- bloodybelly comb jelly
- box jelly
- bread jelly
- coconut jelly
- comb-jelly
- comb jelly
- crystal jelly
- giant phantom jelly
- golden jelly fungus
- grape jelly
- grass jelly
- hair jelly
- hedgerow jelly
- jellification
- jellify
- jelly baby
- jelly bean
- jelly belly
- jelly blubber
- jelly bracelet
- jelly cake
- jelly-coconut
- jelly donut
- jelly doughnut
- jelly ear
- jelly-fish
- jellyfish
- jelly fish
- jelly fungus
- jelly glass
- jelly leaf
- jellylike
- jelly of Wharton
- jelly palm
- jelly plant
- jelly powder
- jelly roll
- jelly roll pan
- jelly shot
- jelly tooth
- meat jelly
- mint jelly
- moon jelly
- peachy keen jelly bean
- peanut butter and jelly
- peanut-butter-and-jelly
- pepper jelly
- petroleum jelly
- redcurrant jelly
- royal jelly
- screaming jelly babies
- sea jelly
- star jelly
- toothed jelly fungus
- toothed jelly mushroom
- vegetable jelly
- Wharton's jelly
Related terms
Descendants
Translations
dessert made by boiling gelatin
|
sweet gelatinous substance derived from fruit juices and pectin
|
jam
|
sieved jam
meat dish
|
jellyfish — see jellyfish
Verb
jelly (third-person singular simple present jellies, present participle jellying, simple past and past participle jellied)
- (transitive) To make into jelly.
- (transitive) To preserve in jelly.
- To wiggle like jelly. (Can we add an example for this sense?)
Translations
to make jelly
|
to wiggle like jelly
|
Etymology 2
Clipping of jealous + -y (informal adjective ending).
Adjective
jelly (comparative more jelly, superlative most jelly)
- (slang) Jealous.
- 2011 February 28, Abby Normal [username], “Re: OT VERY FUNNY: MY NEW HERO CHARLIE SHEEN”, in rec.games.pinball (Usenet):
- If the guy wants to party and bang porn stars, and he's not hurting anyone who really cares?
I think a lot of guys are just jelly! :-)
- 2011, "Exchange smiles, not saliva", The Banner (Grand Blanc High School), Volume 47, Issue 2, December 2011, page 17:
- "I think other people make rude comments because they're jelly [jealous] bro," Schroer said. "We're just showing our love to other people."
- 2012 January 10, pussykatt [username], “BLIND GOSSIP 01/09/12 **BLIND ITEM 2**”, in alt.gossip.celebrities (Usenet):
- Shame on all you haters out there! You’re all just jelly!
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:jelly.
Etymology 3
Noun
jelly (uncountable)
- (India) Vitrified brick refuse used as metal in building roads.
- 1862, Notes on Building and Road-making, with Rules for Estimating Repairs to Tanks and Channels, page 143:
- Under pinning with jelly in chunam — one square.
References
- Henry Yule, A[rthur] C[oke] Burnell (1903) “jelly”, in William Crooke, editor, Hobson-Jobson […] , London: John Murray, […].
References
- William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin E[li] Smith, editors (1911), “jelly”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., →OCLC.
- “jelly”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
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