v. [UP- 4.] a. intr. To boil up; fig. to rise up hotly. † b. trans. To cause to boil. Obs.
1435. Misyn, Fire of Love, 79. Behald, myn inhir partis has vpbolyd [L. efferbuerunt], & þe flawme of charite has wastyd.
c. 1440. Pallad. on Husb., X. 188. Vpboile hit thenne And stere hit vntil honythicke it renne.
1555. Lydgates Chron. Troy, II. xiii. I iv/1. She wepeth With wawes vpboyled from her eyen clere.
a. 1902. E. F. Taylor, Æneid, XII. 1099. Then terribly Æneas wrath upboils.