Dictionary.com says:
Origin:
before 1000; Middle English baken, Old English bacan, past participle bōc baked; cognate with Old HighGerman bahhan, past buoh, Old Norse baka;akin to Dutch bakken, German backen, Greek phṓgein to roast;
A "Chef" (origin: French)
The word bake has one syllable.
to bake (verb) = backe
The word bake is a verb (bake, bakes, baking, baked) and a noun (bake, bakes). Examples: Verb: We're going to bake some clams. Noun: Are you coming to the clam bake?
The word bake is a verb (bake, bakes, baking, baked) and a noun (bake, bakes). Examples: Verb: We're going to bake some clams. Noun: Are you coming to the clam bake?
The word bake is a verb (bake, bakes, baking, baked) and a noun (bake, bakes). Examples: Verb: We're going to bake some clams. Noun: Are you coming to the clam bake?
the origin is where the word came from but the specific origin of the word ballot is latin root word.
The word "origin" is derived from the French word "origin" and the Latin word "originem," both of which mean, beginning, descent, birth, and rise.
The present participle of bake is baking.
where was the word colonel origin
There is no such word as diaster and so no origin word.
The future perfect tense of baked is will have baked.The future tense of the word is bake... "I will bake a pie in a minute"