Rebate vs Rebake - What's the difference?
rebate | rebake |
A deduction from an amount to be paid; an abatement.
The return of part of an amount already paid.
(photography) The edge of a roll of film, from which no image can be developed.
A rectangular groove made to hold two pieces (of wood etc) together; a rabbet.
* '>citation
A piece of wood hafted into a long stick, and serving to beat out mortar.
An iron tool sharpened something like a chisel, and used for dressing and polishing wood.
A kind of hard freestone used in making pavements.
To deduct or return an amount from a bill or payment
To diminish or lessen something
To beat to obtuseness; to deprive of keenness; to blunt; to turn back the point of, as a lance used for exercise.
* Shakespeare
To cut a rebate (or rabbet) in something
To abate; to withdraw.
(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."
As verbs the difference between rebate and rebake
is that rebate is to deduct or return an amount from a bill or payment while rebake is to cook something by baking again.As a noun rebate
is a deduction from an amount to be paid; an abatement.rebate
English
Noun
(en noun)Verb
(rebat)- But doth rebate and blunt his natural edge.
- (Foxe)
Anagrams
* * * English transitive verbs ----rebake
English
Verb
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