Bubble
41bubble — A situation in which asset prices are seriously inflated. The unstable boom thus created may lead to a market crash. The most infamous example of this was the South Sea Bubble of 1720, which led to the collapse of the British share market and the …
42bubble — A situation in which asset prices are seriously inflated. The unstable boom thus created may lead to a market crash. The most infamous example of this was the South Sea Bubble of 1720, which led to the collapse of the British share market and the …
43bubble — Hu a, pōhāhā wai, pua i, lapalapa. ♦ Water bubble, hu a o ka wai. ♦ Soap bubble, hu a kopa …
44bubble — [14] Several Germanic languages have words that sound like, and mean the same as, bubble – Swedish bubla, for instance, and Dutch bobbel – but all are relatively modern, and there is no evidence to link them to a common source. As likely as not,… …
45bubble up — phr verb Bubble up is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑anger, ↑enthusiasm, ↑excitement …
46bubble — 1. v. To completely zone out of a group conversation and engage in one on one conversation with a date or significant other while the group conversation continues. Davin and Elyse bubbled while the group continued debating the existence of true… …
47bubble — 1. v. To completely zone out of a group conversation and engage in one on one conversation with a date or significant other while the group conversation continues. Davin and Elyse bubbled while the group continued debating the existence of true… …
48Bubble — 1. Seifenblasen, Badeschaum ♦ Das neue Bubble von Der Glöckner von Notre Dame ; 2. Kaugummi …
49bubble up — (of a feeling) intensify to the point of being expressed. → bubble …
50bubble up — to appear suddenly. When she laughs, a happy child s laugh bubbles up out of her. The most interesting ideas in education have bubbled up in places as different as New York and Arizona. Etymology: based on the literal meaning of bubble up (= to… …