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bannock

[ UK /bˈænək/ ]
NOUN
  1. a flat bread made of oat or barley flour; common in New England and Scotland

How To Use bannock In A Sentence

  • In present times the name bannock is applied more generally to any baked item of a similar size and shape to the original bannock loaf, and can also be used as a term for a large circular scone which is scored into sections. Archive 2006-06-01
  • We make coffee and bannock when the rain lets up and save it for later. M. Sanjayan: Thelon Expedition: The Country
  • For anyone who perceives Scotland's heritage in a broader sense than bannocks and Braveheart, the destruction of this unique collection would be a national cultural catastrophe.
  • Bake me a bannock, "said she," and cut me a callop, till I go away to push my fortune. Stories to Read or Tell from Fairy Tales and Folklore
  • Her glitterand hair, that was sae gowden," dealt out, with leal hand, the guyser's bannock. Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland Volume 17
  • This should have satisfied me but I couldn't resist the Scottish fruit loaf otherwise known as bannock.
  • For indeed I will never again foregather with any! '"then the Caliph rose and the host set before him a dish of roast goose and a bannock of first - bread [FN#16] and sitting down, fell to cutting off morsels and morselling the Caliph therewith. Arabian nights. English
  • As I sat in his farmhouse, discussing native sheep, Eunson told me about success of the cold mutton (roasted, but still pink and moist) and bere bannocks that he took to a recent UK Slow Food AGM.
  • Larga also provides guests with a northern menu of food such as bannock, caribou stew and fish.
  • The English ran ninety miles from Bannockburn, seared by the "gillies" and the baggage-wagons. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 08, No. 48, October, 1861
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