Rebake vs Rebuke - What's the difference?
rebake | rebuke |
(archaic, technical) To cook something by baking again.
*1919', Lydia Ray Balderston, ' Housewifery: A Manual and Text Book of Practical Housekeeping -
*:"Do not attempt to rebake the tubes at home, as the housewife's oven is no more suited to that work than it is to firing china."
A harsh criticism.
* 2012 , July 15. Richard Williams in Guardian Unlimited,
To criticise harshly; to reprove.
As verbs the difference between rebake and rebuke
is that rebake is (archaic|technical) to cook something by baking again while rebuke is to criticise harshly; to reprove.As a noun rebuke is
a harsh criticism.rebake
English
Verb
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Anagrams
*rebuke
English
Noun
(en noun)Tour de France 2012: Carpet tacks cannot force Bradley Wiggins off track
- There was the sternness of an old-fashioned Tour patron in his rebuke to the young Frenchman Pierre Rolland, the only one to ride away from the peloton and seize the opportunity for a lone attack before being absorbed back into the bunch, where he was received with coolness.