cook
n. 厨子, 厨师 vt. 烹调, 煮饭, 加热 vi. 在煮着
发音
词形变化
教材释义与例句
厨师,厨子
someone who prepares and cooks food as their job
释义与例句
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1.
A person who prepares food.
厨师
厨子
庖丁
庖人
厨人
厨子师
烹饪I'm a terrible cook, so I eat a lot of frozen dinners.
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2.
The head cook of a manor house.
烹饪 -
3.
The degree or quality of cookedness of food.
烹饪 -
4.
The member of a hot-rivetting team who heats the rivets in a brazier, see rivet.
艺术 商务 建筑 工程 -
5.
One who manufactures certain illegal drugs, especially meth.
俚语Police found two meth cooks working in the illicit lab.
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6.
A session of manufacturing certain illegal drugs, especially meth.
俚语 -
7.
A fish, the European striped wrasse, Labrus mixtus.
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8.
An unintended solution to a chess problem, considered to spoil the problem.
游戏
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1.
To prepare food for eating by heating it, often combining with other ingredients.
做饭
做菜
烹调
烹饪
及物/不及物I'm cooking bangers and mash.
He's in the kitchen, cooking.
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2.
To smelt.
及物 游戏 -
3.
To be cooked.
不及物The dinner is cooking on the stove.
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4.
To be uncomfortably hot.
比喻 不及物Look at that poor dog shut up in that car on a day like today - it must be cooking in there.
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5.
To kill, destroy, or otherwise render useless or inoperative through exposure to excessive heat or radiation.
俚语 及物 -
6.
To execute by electric chair.
俚语 及物 -
7.
To hold on to a grenade briefly after igniting the fuse, so that it explodes almost immediately after being thrown.
俚语 及物 政治 军事I always cook my frags, in case they try to grab one and throw it back.
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8.
To concoct or prepare.
My brother was locked up for cooking meth in his basement.
Jesse, we need to cook.
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9.
To tamper with or alter; to cook up.
俚语 及物1927, Ernest Bramah, Max Carrados Mysteries So far as Pridger was concerned the game was up. He had cooked the buying, he had cooked the selling, he had systematically pillaged the stock.
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10.
To play or improvise in an inspired and rhythmically exciting way. (From 1930s jive talk.)
不及物 俚语Watch this band: they cook!
Crank up the Coltrane and start cooking!
This album is called Cookin’ at Miles’ request. He said, “After all, that’s what we did – came in and cooked.”
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11.
To play music vigorously.
不及物 俚语 音乐On the Wagner piece, the orchestra was cooking!
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12.
To proceed with some plan or course of action, or develop some train of thought towards its conclusion (whether this is advantageous, or comical, or digging into a hole).
幽默 不及物 俚语Hol' up, let that boy cook!
OK, who let him cook?
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13.
To proceed with some plan or course of action, or develop some train of thought towards its conclusion (whether this is advantageous, or comical, or digging into a hole).
To proceed with some advantageous course of action; (more generally) to be successful.
幽默 不及物 俚语We had to deal with some problems at first, but now we're cooking.
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14.
To proceed with some plan or course of action, or develop some train of thought towards its conclusion (whether this is advantageous, or comical, or digging into a hole).
To develop insane or fringe ideas.
澳大利亚 贬义 幽默 不及物 俚语The furlough of workers during The Lockdowns left many with a conspiracy bent ample time to cook.
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15.
To defeat or humiliate.
俚语 及物He didn't prepare for the debate at all, so his opponent cooked him hard.
You didn't have to cook him like that!
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16.
To cause to be cooked, i.e. to put in a hopeless situation.
俚语 及物This new labor law is really cooking working-class people.
This assignment is cooking me big time.
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1.
To make the noise of the cuckoo.
不及物 废旧 罕用 -
1.
To throw.
英国 方言 废旧
词汇关系
相关短语
词源
Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *pekʷ- Proto-Indo-European *-eti Proto-Indo-European *pékʷeti Proto-Italic *kʷekʷō Latin coquō Proto-Indo-European *-ós Proto-Indo-European *-ós Proto-Indo-European *-ós Proto-Indo-European *-ós Proto-Indo-European *-os Proto-Italic *-os Old Latin -os Latin -us Latin coquus Vulgar Latin *cocusbor. Old English cōc Middle English cook English cook From Middle English cook, from Old English cōc (“a cook”), from Latin cocus, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *pekʷ- (“to cook, become ripe”). Cognates Cognate with Cimbrian khoch (“cook”), Dutch kok (“cook”), German Koch (“cook”), Luxembourgish Kach (“cook”), Danish kok (“cook”), Icelandic kokkur (“cook”), Norwegian Bokmål and Norwegian Nynorsk kokk (“cook”), Swedish kock (“cook”). Also compare Proto-West Germanic *kokōn (“to cook”) (whence North Frisian kööge, kööki (“to cook, boil”), West Frisian koaitsje (“to cook”), Cimbrian khochan, khòchan (“to cook”), Dutch koken (“to cook”), German kochen (“to cook”), Limburgish kaoke, kauche (“to cook”), Luxembourgish kachen (“to cook”), Vilamovian kocha, koha (“to cook”), Yiddish קאָכן (kokhn, “to cook”)), from Late Latin cocō (“to cook”).
来源:wiktionary