verb (used without object)
to move in a tumbling, irregular manner, as boiling water.
It is difficult to analyze the parts of popple, and most authorities say imitativeof the motion, of the sound, of both? There are possible related words in Frisian popelje to throb, bubble up and Dutch popelen to throb, quiver (with emotion), and German dialect poppeln to bubble, bubble up.”Popple in the sense of “to move in a tumbling, irregular manner” entered English by the 15th century.
The breeze had so far raised no more than a little ripple on the water, so that the boat poppled, and thumped gently, as it drifted along, but kept all the time one general course.
The leaves upon the aspen-tree / They poppled in the breeze / And held the drifting harmony / Of music in the trees.
The adjective daedal (also spelled dedal) comes via the Latin adjective daedalus and proper noun Daedalus from the Greek adjective 餃硃穩餃硃梭棗莽 skillful, skillfully made and proper noun 嗨硃穩餃硃梭棗莽, the mythical Athenian hero who built the Labyrinth at Knossos for King Minos and was the father of Icarus. Further etymology is unclear: 餃硃穩餃硃梭棗莽 is likely to be from a pre-Greek language.Daedal entered English in the late 16th century.
After dinner, they took a turn in the garden; where Leontine was surprized [sic] to see how greatly the daedal hand of nature had been improved by the assistance of art.
An unrestrained genius with a daedal mind, Plumer was New Hampshire’s only Jeffersonian.
noun
a person who talks or acts agreeably to someone, in order to keep that person in good humor, especially in the hope of gaining something.
The noun jollier, a derivative of the informal verb jolly to talk or act agreeably in order to keep someone in good humor, especially in the hope of gaining something, is an Americanism dating back to the end of the 19th century. If only there were fewer jolliers and jollyees.
Certainly he would never dream that a “jollier” could become the leader of a great English political party.
The Jollier jollied Mr. Thompson up and down the sweet nerve of flattery in a manner truly artistic, then came away with a double half column ad.