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scald (v.)

c. 1200, "to be very hot; to afflict painfully with hot liquid or steam," from Old North French escalder "to scald, to scorch" (Old French eschalder "heat, boil up, bubble," Modern French échauder), from Late Latin excaldare "bathe in hot water" (source also of Spanish escaldar, Italian scaldare "heat with hot water"), from Latin ex "out, out of" (see ex-) + calidus "hot" (from PIE root *kele- (1) "warm"). Related: Scalded; scalding. The noun is c. 1600, from the verb.

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Definitions of scald from WordNet
1
scald (v.)
subject to harsh criticism;
Synonyms: blister / whip
scald (v.)
treat with boiling water;
scald tomatoes so that they can be peeled
scald (v.)
heat to the boiling point;
scald the milk
scald (v.)
burn with a hot liquid or steam;
She scalded her hands when she turned on the faucet and hot water came out
2
scald (n.)
a burn cause by hot liquid or steam;
scald (n.)
the act of burning with steam or hot water;
From wordnet.princeton.edu