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cáscara. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
cáscara, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
cáscara in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
cáscara you have here. The definition of the word
cáscara will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
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Spanish
Etymology
From Vulgar Latin reconstructed as *quassicāre (“to strike repeatedly”), from Latin quassāre (“to tremor; to cause to tremor by repeated strikes”) + -icō (suffix indicating frequent or repetitive action), from quatiō (“to shake”) + -tō (suffix indicating frequent or repetitive action). First applied to bark and peels from the manner of their removal. Cognate with English cask and Portuguese casca.
Pronunciation
Noun
cáscara f (plural cáscaras)
- bark from a bush or tree
- Synonym: corteza
2002, Heriberto Feraudy Espino, Macua, page 213:La cáscara de este árbol era utilizada para hacer tangas.- The bark of this tree was used to make thongs.
- any similar outer layer, as the peel of a fruit, the rind of a melon, or the shell of an egg or nut, husk of a coconut
1845, Elementos de química:El color leonado de la cáscara de nuez [...]- The fawn color of the walnut shell
1995, Maria Jesus Gil De Antuñano, Helados, page 11:Las dos mitades de cáscara de piña se meten en el congelador.- The two halves of the pineapple peel are put in the freezer.
Derived terms
References
- Friedrich August Flückiger & al. (1879) Pharmacographia... (in Spanish), page 346
- : The hardships of bark-collecting in the primeval forests of South America are of the severest kind, and undergone only by the half-civilized Indians and people of mixed race, in the pay of speculators or companies located in the towns. Those who are engaged in the business, especially the collectors themselves, are called Cascarilleros or Cascadores, from the Spanish word Cascara, bark.
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