different between raw vs caustic

raw

English

Etymology

From Middle English rawe, raw, rau, from Old English hr?aw (raw, uncooked), from Proto-West Germanic *hrau, from Proto-Germanic *hrawaz, *hr?waz (raw), from Proto-Indo-European *krewh?- (raw meat, fresh blood). Cognate with Scots raw (raw), Dutch rauw (raw), German roh (raw), Swedish (raw), Icelandic hrár (raw), Latin cr?dus (raw, bloody, uncooked), Irish cró (blood), Lithuanian kraujas (blood), Russian ????? (krov?, blood). Related also to Old English hr?ow, hr?oh (rough, fierce, wild, angry, disturbed, troubled, sad, stormy, tempestuous). More at ree.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) enPR: , IPA(key): /???/
Rhymes: -??
  • (US) enPR: , IPA(key): /??/
  • (cotcaught merger) enPR: r?, IPA(key): /??/
  • (cotcaught merger, father-bother merger) enPR: , IPA(key): /??/
  • Homophones: roar (in non-rhotic accents), rah (with cot-caught merger and father-bother merger)

Adjective

raw (comparative rawer, superlative rawest)

  1. (cooking) (of food) Not cooked. [from 9th c.]
  2. (of materials, products, etc.) Not treated or processed; in a natural state, unrefined, unprocessed. [from 10th c.]
  3. Having had the skin removed or abraded; chafed, tender; exposed, lacerated. [from 14th c.]
  4. New or inexperienced. [from 16th c.]
  5. Crude in quality; rough, uneven, unsophisticated. [from 16th c.]
  6. (statistics) (of data) Uncorrected, without analysis. [from 20th c.]
    • 2010, "Under the volcano", The Economist, 16 Oct 2010:
      What makes Mexico worrying is not just the raw numbers but the power of the cartels over society.
  7. (of weather) Unpleasantly cold or damp.
  8. (of an emotion, personality, etc.) Unmasked, undisguised, strongly expressed
  9. Candid in a representation of unpleasant facts, conditions, etc.
  10. (of language) Unrefined, crude, or insensitive, especially with reference to sexual matters
  11. (obsolete) Not covered; bare; bald.

Synonyms

  • See also Thesaurus:raw

Derived terms

  • rawly
  • rawness
  • raw sugar

Translations

Adverb

raw

  1. (slang) Without a condom.

Synonyms

  • (without a condom): Thesaurus:condomless

Translations

Noun

raw (plural raws)

  1. (sugar refining, sugar trade) An unprocessed sugar; a batch of such.
    • 1800, Louisiana Sugar Planters' Association, Lousiana Sugar Chemists' Association, American Cane Growers' Association, The Louisiana Planter and Sugar Manufacturer, Volume 22, page 287,
      With the recent advance in London yellow crystals, however, the disproportion of the relative value of these two kinds has been considerably reduced, and a better demand for crystallized raws should consequently occur.
    • 1921, American Chemical Society, The Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, Volume 13, Part 1, page 149,
      Early in the year the raws were melted to about 20 Brix in order to facilitate filtration.
    • 1939, The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, Volume 148, Part 2, page 2924,
      The world sugar contract closed 1 to 3 points net higher, with sales of only 36 lots. London raws sold at 8s. 4½d., and futures there were unchanged to 3d. higher.
  2. A galled place; an inveterate sore.
  3. (by extension, figuratively) A point about which a person is particularly sensitive.
    • 1934, Harold Heslop, Goaf (page 29)
      In a moment Tom was angry. The women saw that Bill had touched him upon the raw, and they went out of the room to prepare a meal.
  4. (anime fandom slang) A recording or rip of a show that has not been fansubbed.
  5. (manga fandom slang) A scan that has not been cleaned (purged of blemishes arising from the scanning process) and has not been scanlated.

Translations

Anagrams

  • RWA, Rwa, WAR, WRA, War, War., war, war-

Anguthimri

Adjective

raw

  1. (Mpakwithi) black

References

  • Terry Crowley, The Mpakwithi dialect of Anguthimri (1981), page 188

Middle English

Etymology 1

From Old English hr?aw.

Noun

raw

  1. Alternative form of rawe (raw)

Etymology 2

From Old English r?w, r?w.

Noun

raw

  1. Alternative form of rewe (row)

Welsh

Noun

raw

  1. Soft mutation of rhaw.

Mutation

raw From the web:

  • what raw meat can dogs eat
  • what raw materials are needed for photosynthesis
  • what raw meat causes salmonella
  • what raw meat can cats eat
  • what rawr means
  • what raw material is plastic made from
  • what raw meat can ferrets eat
  • what rawr means in dinosaur


caustic

English

Etymology

From the Latin causticus (burning), from the Ancient Greek ????????? (kaustikós, burning).

Pronunciation

  • enPR: kôs't?k, k?s't?k, IPA(key): /?k??st?k/, /?k?st?k/
  • Rhymes: -??st?k

Adjective

caustic (comparative more caustic, superlative most caustic)

  1. Capable of burning, corroding or destroying organic tissue.
  2. (of language, etc.) Sharp, bitter, cutting, biting, and sarcastic in a scathing way.
    • 1853, Charlotte Brontë, Villette
      Madame Beck esteemed me learned and blue; Miss Fanshawe, caustic, ironic, and cynical
    • c. 1930, W.H.Auden, "The Quest"
      though he came too late / To join the martyrs, there was still a place / Among the tempters for a caustic tongue / / To test the resolution of the young / With tales of the small failings of the great

Synonyms

  • (capable of destroying tissue): acidic, biting, burning, corrosive, searing
  • (severe, sharp): bitchy, biting, catty, mordacious, nasty, sarcastic, scathing, sharp, spiteful, vitriolic

Derived terms

Related terms

Translations

Noun

caustic (plural caustics)

  1. Any substance or means which, applied to animal or other organic tissue, burns, corrodes, or destroys it by chemical action; an escharotic.
  2. (optics, computer graphics) The envelope of reflected or refracted rays of light for a given surface or object.
  3. (mathematics) The envelope of reflected or refracted rays for a given curve.
  4. (informal, chemistry) Caustic soda.

Derived terms

  • lunar caustic

Translations

caustic From the web:

  • what caustic mean
  • what caustic soda
  • what caustic soda used for
  • what caustic voice line was removed
  • what's caustics ultimate
  • what caustic soda means
  • what caustic is used for
  • what's caustic substance
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