different between bullace vs bullate

bullace

English

Etymology

From Middle English bolas, bolace, from Anglo-Norman and Old French beloce, buloce (sloe), from Vulgar Latin *bullucea, from Late Latin bulluca (kind of small fruit); of Celtic/Gaulish origin, akin to Celtiberian *bull?c?, from Proto-Celtic *bull?k?, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *b?eHw- (to swell, puff), itself imitative. Possibly influenced by Latin galla (oak apple) with metathesis of the consonants.

See also Spanish bugalla (oak apple), Portuguese bugalho, and (the distantly related) Latin bucca.

Noun

bullace (plural bullaces)

  1. A small European plum (Prunus domestica subsp. insititia).
    Synonym: damson
    • 1930, Harold Webber Freeman, Down in the Valley (page 48)
      If he ate bullace tart and bullace pie for a week, he would hardly empty the smallest of the baskets; and then they would begin to go bad. Nothing remained but to give them away, but to whom?
  2. The bully tree.

Translations

References

Anagrams

  • cue ball, cueball

bullace From the web:

  • what is bullace fruit
  • what are bullace used for
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  • what is bullace gin
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  • what is a bullace grape


bullate

English

Etymology

Latin bullatus

Adjective

bullate (comparative more bullate, superlative most bullate)

  1. (medicine) Resembling a bulla or blister; inflated; blistered; bulliform.
  2. (medicine) Of bacterial cultures, having a growth which is blistered; rising in convex prominences.

Anagrams

  • ballute

Latin

Verb

bull?te

  1. second-person plural present active imperative of bull?

bullate From the web:

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