bagasse

English

Etymology

From French bagasse, from Spanish bagazo, from baga (berry).

Noun

bagasse (countable and uncountable, plural bagasses)

  1. The residue from processing sugar cane after the juice is extracted.

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French

Etymology 1

Attested since the 1720s, from Spanish bagazo, from baga (berry).[1]

Noun

bagasse f (plural bagasses)

  1. bagasse (residue from processing sugar cane after extracting the juice)
  2. residue of indigo after extracting the dye by fermentation

Etymology 2

Attested since the 1580s, from Old Occitan bagassa (whore), from Gallo-Roman *bacassa ("servant").[1][2][3]

(Some scholars previously postulatd that it derived from Arabic باغية (bàghya, prostitute), from بغاء (bàghà),[4][5][6][7] but this was doubted by Émile Littré and is now considered unlikely.)

Noun

bagasse f (plural bagasses)

  1. a female prostitute

References

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