belly
/ˈbɛli/
belly
English
Noun Top 3,406
American (Lessac)
(medium)
Female
0.7s
American (Amy)
(medium)
Female
0.7s
American (Ryan)
(medium)
Male
0.3s
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Definition
The abdomen (especially a fat one).
Etymology
Inherited from Middle English bely, beli, bali, below, belew, balyw, from Old English bielġ (“bag, pouch, bulge”), from Proto-West Germanic *balgi, *balgu, from Proto-Germanic *balgiz, *balguz (“skin, hide, bellows, bag”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰelǵʰ- (“to swell, blow up”). Cognate with Dutch balg, German Balg, Danish bælg, Old Irish bolg, Welsh bol. Doublet of bellows, blague, bulge, and budge. See also bellows. For the belly — bellows connection compare typologically Macedonian мев (mev, “abdomen, belly; bellows”). Also compare Ancient Greek φῦσα (phûsa, “bellows; bladder; ...”), Latin venter — vēsīca, Russian пу́зо (púzo) — пузы́рь (puzýrʹ), пузырёк (puzyrjók).
Example Sentences
- "You've grown a belly over Christmas! Time to join the gym again."
- "My belly was full of wine."
- "Before I formed thee in the bellie, I knew thee; […]"
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