bolgia
English
Italian
Etymology
Probably borrowed from Old French bolge, bouge, from Late Latin bulga, or less likely directly from a Latin adjectival form bulgea.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈbɔl.d͡ʒa/
- Rhymes: -ɔldʒa
- Hyphenation: bòl‧gia
Noun
bolgia f (plural bolge)
- a mob or crowd (of people in a confined space)
- bedlam
- a bag, a pouch, especially one which opens longways
- a ditch, hole in the ground
- 1308–1321, Dante Alighieri (translated by Robert Hollander and Jean Hollander, 2000), Commedìa (The Inferno), canto 23, lines 31–33:
- S'elli è che sì la destra costa giaccia,
che noi possiam ne l'altra bolgia scendere,
noi fuggirem l'imaginata caccia.- If the slope there to the right allows us
to make our way into the other ditch,
we shall escape the chase we both envision.
- If the slope there to the right allows us
- 1308–1321, Dante Alighieri (translated by Robert Hollander and Jean Hollander, 2000), Commedìa (The Inferno), canto 23, lines 31–33:
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