different between rebake vs retake

rebake

English

Etymology

re- +? bake

Verb

rebake (third-person singular simple present rebakes, present participle rebaking, simple past and past participle rebaked)

  1. (transitive) 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

  • beaker, breake, e-brake

rebake From the web:



retake

English

Etymology

From re- +? take.

Pronunciation

  • (verb) IPA(key): /?i??te?k/
  • (noun) IPA(key): /??i?te?k/

Verb

retake (third-person singular simple present retakes, present participle retaking, simple past retook, past participle retaken)

  1. to take something again
  2. to take something back
  3. to capture or occupy somewhere again
    The army tried repeatedly to retake the fort they had been driven from.
  4. to photograph or film again

Translations

Noun

retake (plural retakes)

  1. a scene that is filmed again, or a picture that is photographed again
  2. an instance of resitting an examination

Translations

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