I've heard people use them interchangeably.
Just so I don't go crazy, what is the difference?
3 Answers
When you have two nouns together, usually the second is the basic meaning, and the first one acts like an adjective to modify it. An apple tree is a kind of tree. A tree house is a kind of house.
So sugar cane is a kind of cane. (It’s a cane from which sugar is produced.) Cane sugar is a kind of sugar. (It’s sugar that’s produced from cane.)
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1Any explanation for the downvote, by the way? I’m not offended by getting them, but it would be helpful to know why. – PLL May 25 '11 at 22:41
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You're offended, obviously. – May 25 '11 at 22:45
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+1 The answer looks obvious because the question is simple. For a native speaker that is. – Alain Pannetier Φ May 26 '11 at 00:10
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3Downvoting an answer should always be accompanied by an explanatory comment, I feel. If we have to ask for an explanation, what does that really say about communication in this community? How else will the author of the downvoted answer hAve a chance to learn about what aspect of the answer was perceived as not suitable/wrong/not welcome. – teylyn May 26 '11 at 09:11
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+1 for not just answering, but giving the general principle that explains why it's so. – Mechanical snail Jul 11 '12 at 19:15
Cane sugar comes from sugarcane. Sugarcane is the crop, cane sugar is the refined grains of sugar.
Edit: you also get other things from sugarcane, such as falernum, molasses, rum, cachaça, bagasse and ethanol.
There are photos of the crop are on Wikipedia.
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‘Sugarcane’ as one word seems like an Americanism to me; in the UK it's ‘sugar cane’, two words. – gidds Sep 12 '21 at 17:58
Cane sugar is a type of sugar, sugar cane is a type of cane. The difference is which is the noun and which is the adjective.
Cane sugar is a type of sugar derived from a particular cane plant.
Sugar cane is a type of cane plant that can be used to make sugar.
For our next question we want to know, which came first, the chicken or the egg?
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