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Rebate vs Rebake - What's the difference?

rebate | rebake |

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)
  • 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.
  • Verb

    (rebat)
  • 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
  • But doth rebate and blunt his natural edge.
  • To cut a rebate (or rabbet) in something
  • To abate; to withdraw.
  • (Foxe)

    Anagrams

    * * * English transitive verbs ----

    rebake

    English

    Verb

  • (archaic, technical) To cook something by baking again.
  • *1919', Lydia Ray Balderston, ' Housewifery: A Manual and Text Book of Practical Housekeeping - Page 272
  • *:"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."
  • Anagrams

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