What is the meaning of Bulla?

A blister, vesicle, or other thin-walled cavity or lesion, as:

  1. Such a blister that is more than 5 mm in diameter.

    Such a blister that is more than 5 mm in diameter.

    A clay envelope or hollow ball, typically with seal impressions or writing on its outside indicating its contents.

    In ancient Rome, a kind of amulet or boss.

    Later, a handwritten document from the papal chancellery.

    The tympanic part of a temporal bone (having a bubble-like appearance)

    A rich Jamaican cake made with molasses and spiced with ginger and nutmeg.

    two

    to be circumcised

    to bubble, gush up

    to speak unintelligibly

    to gabble, babble, talk nonsense, twaddle

    to simmer

    bull (papal bull)

    third-person singular past historic of buller

    inflection of bullar:

    1. third-person singular present indicative
    2. second-person singular imperative

    third-person singular present indicative

    second-person singular imperative

    to talk nonsense

    to boil, to bubble up

    a piston

    a bully

    buoy

    bulla

    bull

    bull

    Alternative form of bolla (bowl)

    a bubble

    a swollen or bubble-shaped object, particularly:

    1. a knob, boss, or stud, as on doors, shields, etc.
    2. a bulla: a protective (usually golden) amulet worn by upper-class Roman children
    3. a round metallic seal certifying official medieval documents, particularly the golden imperial seal and the leaden papal one.

    a knob, boss, or stud, as on doors, shields, etc.

    a bulla: a protective (usually golden) amulet worn by upper-class Roman children

    a round metallic seal certifying official medieval documents, particularly the golden imperial seal and the leaden papal one.

    a papal bull or other official document sealed with a bulla

    bull (papal bull; a document from the papal chancellery)

    rowdiness, racket, ruckus

    urgence

    inflection of bullir:

    1. first/third-person singular present subjunctive
    2. third-person singular imperative

    first/third-person singular present subjunctive

    third-person singular imperative

    Source: wiktionary.org