Baccate vs Baccare - What's the difference?
baccate | baccare |
(botany) Pulpy throughout, like a berry; said of fruits.
* 1848 , Samuel Frederick Gray, Gray's Supplement to the Pharmacopoeia
Looking like a berry.
Producing berries.
(obsolete) Stand back! give place! — a cant word of the Elizabethan writers, probably in ridicule of some person who pretended to a knowledge of Latin which he did not possess.
:* Baccare! you are marvelous forward. - Act I, Scene II
English interjections
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As an adjective baccate
is (botany) pulpy throughout, like a berry; said of fruits.As an interjection baccare is
(obsolete) stand back! give place! — a cant word of the elizabethan writers, probably in ridicule of some person who pretended to a knowledge of latin which he did not possess.baccate
English
Adjective
(-)References
*baccate, The Free Dictionary. ----