Do we say gel or jell
The following line from the same poem has eleven: "Flota f=amig-heals, fugle gel=icost.
V. be dense &c adj.; become solid, render solid &c adj.; solidify, solidate^; concrete, set, take a set, consolidate, congeal, coagulate; curd, curdle; lopper; fix, clot, cake, candy, precipitate, deposit, cohere, crystallize; petrify &c (harden) 323. condense, thicken, gel, inspissate^, incrassate^; compress, squeeze, ram down, constipate.
Phavorinus A. Gel.
Why, it'll make me plumb cheerful to have a gel with me on that journey ... seem like I'd Girlie or Babe along.
The Steward, seated on his kit-bag, was murmuring a snatch of song that asserted the rather personal fact that "our gel's a big plump lass."
Why, to see my little gel, o' courseGawd curse you! . . .
Marysame as the little gel's. MANSON.
"W'y, if you ain't the gel and boy?" "Where's Bill?"
Top that off with a bowl of Jell-O and spittle from a little fellow.
"What if she's made them all into little candy corns or tea bags or Jell-O Jigglers or something?" The Tiger's stomach roared at the sound of these food words.
The mud simply won't jell.'
To him the sly Gloriana served Anglo-Saxon viands: pies, "jell'" (compounded according to a famous Wisconsin recipe), and hot biscuit, light as the laughter of children!
I kin give ye that, an' smashed taters an' chicken gravy, an' dried corn, an' hot corn-pone, an' currant jell, an' strawberry preserves, an' my own cannin' o' peaches, an' pumpkin-pie an' coffee.
Add the strawberries and the sugar lb. for lb., and boil for 20 minutes longer, or till it will "jell," as Meg would say.
I like 'em cooked down an' strained to a jell.
JELL, GEORGE C. Master builders of opera.
George C. Jell (A); 17Feb61; R271356. JENKINS, BURRIS.
JELL, GEORGE C. Master builders of opera.
George C. Jell (A); 17Feb61; R271356. JENKINS, BURRIS.