ferv- +
(Latin: to boil; hot; to begin to boil, to be hot; deeply earnest; ardent)
effervesce
1. To break into violent chemical action.
2. To give off bubbles of gas; especially, as the result of chemical action; to bubble.
3. Of the gas itself; to issue fort in bubbles.
4. To stir up, excite, exhilarate.
effervescence, effervescency
The action of bubbling up as if boiling; the tumultuous rise of bubbles of gas from a fluid; especially, as the result of chemical action (without necessarily implying heat).
effervescent
That which has the property of rising in bubbles.
effervescible
Capable of producing effervescence; ready to effervesce; becoming heated, excited.
effervescing
That which effervesces.
effervescingly
In an effervescing manner, sparklingly.
effervescive
Tending to or characterized by effervescence.
fervent
1. Hot, burning, glowing, boiling.
2. Of persons, their passions, dispositions, or actions; ardent, intensely earnest. From 17th century almost exclusively with reference to love or hatred, zeal, devotion or aspiration.
3. Now rare: of conflict, uproar, formerly also of pestilence, a wild beast, etc.; hot, fierce, raging.
fervently
With warmth of feeling; ardently, earnestly, hotly, passionately. Now rare except in expressions of love, desire, prayer, etc.
fervescence
An increase in body temperature above normal; a fever.
fervescent
Growing hot.
fervid
1. Intensely fervent or zealous; impassioned.
2. Extremely hot; burning, glowing.
fervidly
Done with intense fervency or zealousness.
fervor
1. Intensity of emotion; ardor.
2. Warmth or glow of feeling, passion, vehemence, intense zeal; and instance of the same.
3. Intense heat, glowing condition.
fervour
Chiefly the British spelling variation of fervor.
Related "heat, hot" word units:
pyreto-;
thermo-.
Related "bubble" word unit:
ebulli-.