You got a great many oder nice tings a slabe not got, many nice tings; but when dey got bacca dey got eberyting dey want.
Liverpool scale, and that's a lot more than you Dagos give amongst yourselves, and if the men work well I'll throw in a dash besides for 'bacca money.
The steamer gets paid a shilling a day, and grubs and berths you accordingly, and you earn your 'bacca money by bumming around the galley and helping the cook peel spuds.
Den when I needed somp'n lak 'bacca or a little piece of chocolate, I could go to de sto' an' buy it.
The bacca was dry as powder, but it eased the gnawin' of my limbs, and I tottered on.
My claes like tinder; the bed o' dry leaves; my shrivelled boots; the bacca in powder.
So crammin' what was left of my bacca into my pipe, I turned down a lane, and could see the man and woman that I'd spoken to stopping to look after me.
During the cold nights, when unable to sleep through being on some duty, sitting round the old camp fire thinking, the old pipe of ’bacca has a very soothing effect.
Moreover, a word in thy ear: I would not have it made public; I'll smoke no more 'bacca that comes to me by a back way.
List, old friend, while I tell thee that to pass another such evening I would break my pipe into a hundred pieces and never draw a whiff of 'bacca between my teeth," said Hal.
And that light will not let your tinder be fired over a pipe o' 'bacca that has paid no duty?
I believe that why I didn't smoke this evening was by reason of the feeling that was in me that 'twould be a solemn sin for me to let him have even a sniff of 'bacca that had been run.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "bacca" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.