bubble over
冒出的气泡,冒泡,冒出的泡沫,冒出的泡泡
Related Words
Definitions
- 1
- : a nearly spherical body of gas contained in a liquid.
- : a small globule of gas in a thin liquid envelope.
- : a globule of air or gas, or a globular vacuum, contained in a solid.
- : anything that lacks firmness, substance, or permanence; an illusion or delusion.
- : the act or sound of bubbling.
- : a spherical or nearly spherical canopy or shelter; dome: The bombing plane bristled with machine-gun bubbles.A network of radar bubbles stretches across northern Canada.
- : a domelike structure, usually of inflated plastic, used to enclose a swimming pool, tennis court, etc.
- : a protected, exempt, or unique area, industry, etc.: The oasis is a bubble of green in the middle of the desert.
- : an area that can be defended, protected, patrolled, etc., or that comes under one's jurisdiction: The carrier fleet's bubble includes the Hawaiian Islands.
- : a zone of cognitive or psychological isolation, in which one’s preexisting ideas are reinforced through interactions with like-minded people or those with similar social identities: You can’t live in your own partisan political bubble 364 days of the year and then expect to happily reconnect with your family at Thanksgiving.
- : a group or circle of people who interact or socialize with one another because of familial ties, shared interests, etc.: I do try to expand my social bubble and look for opportunities to make new friends.Also called pod .a small group of people who interact or socialize exclusively with one another in order to contain the spread of a contagious disease: I’m only getting together with my quarantine bubble of five family members.
- : Economics. Also called spec·u·la·tive bub·ble [spek-yuh-luh-tiv buhb-uhl], /ˈspɛk yəˌlə tɪv ˈbʌb əl/, as·set price bub·ble [as-et prahys-buhb-uhl] /ˈæs ɛt ˈpraɪs ˈbʌb əl/ . an inflated speculation that causes an unsustainable increase in the value of goods, property, or other investment: The real-estate bubble ruined many investors when it burst.a sudden, temporary change or divergence from a trend: In May there was a bubble in car sales, with three percent more being sold than last year.
- 1
bub·bled, bub·bling.
- : to form, produce, or release bubbles; effervesce.
- : to flow or spout with a gurgling noise; gurgle.
- : to boil: The water bubbled in the pot.
- : to speak, move, issue forth, or exist in a lively, sparkling manner; exude cheer: The play bubbled with songs and dances.
- : to seethe or stir, as with excitement: His mind bubbles with plans and schemes.
- 1
bub·bled, bub·bling.
- : to cause to bubble; make bubbles in.
- : Archaic. to cheat; deceive; swindle.
- 1
- : bubble over, to become lively: The last time I saw her she was bubbling over with enthusiasm.
Synonyms & Antonyms
Examples
They ultimately decided coming to the bubble and playing televised games would give them the largest platform, though now at least some are wondering if that’s still true.
We’re down here playing in the bubble to do these things for social justice and all that.
So it was that hockey’s return — staged in an antiseptic bubble — involved a scrap.
All 16 teams that make the postseason will play on the same three courts, sans fans, deep inside a disinfected Disney World fortress known as the bubble.
In communities from Chicago to San Diego, parents are forming pandemic pods and microschools — bubbles where small groups of kids can meet and learn together.
Even as early as December 4, remarks from inside the bubble were cryptic and frightened.
The housing bubble was at very the center of the financial crisis that birthed Dodd-Frank.
All sorts of government policies blew that bubble up until it popped.
When the “Buying Bubble” bursts, what then for the U.S. economy?
Marvel and DC Plan 20 Movies for the Next Six Years: Will the Comic Book Movie Bubble Burst?
Or turn from the gray officials to the purple citizens of the soap bubble commonwealth of socialism.
Violet laid the tin plate over the top for a cover, and they all stood by to hear the first bubble.
Pederson headed a bloc against 'Carmack's Folly,' but he backed the wrong horse, and when the bubble burst he was out in the cold.
There was something so irresistibly amusing in his voice and smile that Mrs. Admaston began to bubble over with laughter.
There came a little bubble of laughter from Peggy, which seemed to remove all diffidence from Collingwood.