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  2. The Oxford Companion to Sugar & Sweets lists the bonbon as originating in the French royal court in the 17th Century but was likely in reference to sugar coated Jordan almonds and other bite sized fruit based candies.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BonbonBonbon - Wikipedia

    Etymology and history. The word "bonbon" arose from the reduplication of the word bon, meaning "good" in the French language. Its use originated in the seventeenth century within the French royal court and spread to other European countries by the eighteenth century.

  4. Sep 28, 2017 · Old English idel "empty, void; vain; worthless, useless," from Proto-West Germanic *idla- (source also of Old Saxon idal, Old Frisian idel "empty, worthless," Old Dutch idil, Old High German ital, German eitel "vain, useless, mere, pure"), a word of unknown origin.

  5. Bonbon, a French word for ‘sweet’, was taken up by English towards the end of the eighteenth century (‘Clarendel, lounging upon a chair in the middle of the shop, sat eating bon bons,’ Mme D'Arblay, Camilla, 1796), and probably reached its heyday as a more delicate alternative to the foursquare sweet in the late Victorian and Edwardian ...

  6. Bonbon can mean a few different kinds of candy, but often means one with a hard chocolate cover and a soft center. The hard outer coating of chocolate is called the couverture, which comes from the word meaning “cover” in French. Bonbon is also used for hard candies in general.

  7. The name “bon bon” comes from the French word for “good,” so it essentially translates to “goody.” Over time, the popularity of bon bons spread throughout Europe and eventually to the United States. In the mid-1800s, drop-shaped hard candies became a new and exciting invention in France.

  8. The earliest known use of the noun bon-bon is in the late 1700s. OED's earliest evidence for bon-bon is from 1796, in the writing of Fanny Burney, writer.