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Jell-O

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: jello, Jello, and jellõ

English

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Jell-O advertisement from the December 1927 issue of Woman's Home Companion.

Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Trademarked by Pearle Bixby Wait and named by his wife, May Wait. Clipping of gelatin and jelly, both ultimately from Latin gelō (to freeze, cause to congeal), following a then relatively popular trend in the United States to add “O” to the end of products, which according to The Dictionary of Trade Names Origins started because the letter is pleasing to the eye.[1] By surface analysis, jell (jelly) +‎ -o.

Pronunciation

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Proper noun

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Jell-O

  1. (US, Canada) A brand of dessert made from gelatin.
  2. (genericized trademark, by extension) Any brand of fruit flavored gelatin dessert mix.
    Synonym: (UK, Australia) jelly
    The store brand Jell-O is just as good and one third the price.

Derived terms

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References

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  1. ^ Matt Buzz (24 January 2014), “The Fascinating, Untold History of Jell-O”, in Gizmodo[1], archived from the original on 25 January 2014:
    May named her and her husband’s new favorite dessert “Jell-O,” a combined version of the words gelatin and jelly (with both words deriving from the Latin “gelare”[]). [] around this time in America it was simply a relatively popular trend to add “O” to the end of your product name. According to The Dictionary of Trade Names Origins, the practice got started simply because “O” is pleasing to the eye.