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bullace
[ bool-is ]
noun
- the damson.
- the muscadine.
bullace
/ ˈbʊlɪs /
noun
- a small Eurasian rosaceous tree, Prunus domestica insititia (or P. insititia ), of which the damson is the cultivated form See also plum 1
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Word History and Origins
Origin of bullace1
1300–50; Middle English bolaz; akin to Medieval Latin bolluca, French beloce
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Word History and Origins
Origin of bullace1
C14: from Old French beloce , from Medieval Latin bolluca , perhaps of Gaulish origin
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Example Sentences
They went on again and found a wild bullace.
From Project Gutenberg
Yonder a load of great russets; near by heavy pears bending the strong branches; round black damsons; luscious egg-plums hanging their yellow ovals overhead; bullace, not yet ripe, but presently sweetly piquant.
From Project Gutenberg
Few people nowadays know what is a “bullace.”
From Project Gutenberg
So you may conceive how deeply the poor old man thought of these gages, beside which his little orchard of damsons and bullaces was of small account.
From Project Gutenberg
There they also found grapes so prodigiously large, that they seemed more like bullace than grapes.
From Project Gutenberg
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