descascarado
Descascarado is a term found in Spanish and Portuguese lexicons, used chiefly as an adjective describing something that has had its outer skin, rind, or shell removed. It can refer to edible items such as fruits and vegetables, or to other objects that have been peeled or stripped of an exterior layer. In everyday Portuguese, the standard form for peeled items is descascado (masculine) or descascada (feminine); descascarado may appear in regional dialects or in older texts as a variant. In Spanish, equivalents like pelado or pelada are more common for describing peeled fruit, while descascarado can appear in certain dialects or historical usage but is less typical in contemporary speech.
Etymologically, descascarado derives from the prefix des- meaning removal and the root cascar, related to casca
Usage and nuance: descriptively, someone might encounter phrases such as uma maçã descascada (a peeled apple)