Baccaliegia 【EXTENDED】

Do not search for Baccaliegia. Invent it. Use it in your thesis. Name your band after it. The Oxford English Dictionary isn't watching.

Imagine a peasant dish from the 17th century: Salted cod soaked for three days to remove the brine (the threshold of patience), layered with polenta, and baked under a crust of crushed walnuts and rosemary. It was eaten on the eve of Lent to use up the last of the meat-fish substitutes. If this theory holds, "Baccaliegia" is a —a word that fell out of the Vocabolario Veneziano around 1820. Today, searching for a Baccaliegia recipe would yield nothing, but a Venetian grandmother might slap your hand and say, "No, stupido, that's Baccalà Mantecato. Baccaliegia isn't real. Eat your polenta." Theory 3: The Medical Malady Given the suffix -ia (which often denotes a medical condition, such as anemia or phobia), "Baccaliegia" could theoretically be a psychological disorder of the 19th century. Baccaliegia

But if you are here because you actually misspelled (the degree) or Bacchanalia (the party), then this article has served its purpose: to prove that even a wrong turn in language can lead to a fascinating destination. Do not search for Baccaliegia