| 释义 | 
		verb dʒʊkjo͝ok [with object]West Indian Pierce, poke, or stab.  a hoe to jook the ground in the yard  he jook the knife in the sheep and kill it dead one time  Example sentencesExamples -  They were interlopers on another level; they didn't just want a quick jook, they wanted land and bodies, and they cut down the forest and penetrated the land to have their way.
 -  Why don't these two cats just rent out a boxing ring, invite the press, hire a ref, get regulation gloves and quit jooking’ each other, as they say north of 125th street in Manhattan.
 -  I hope that if any more jooking takes place for the season you will be the donor and not the recipient!
 -  But, as Hurston found, the jooks were certainly not ‘safe.’
 -  Then I jooked it into his foot and it started bleeding and I saved the day, and tha's my story!
 
 
 Origin   Of uncertain origin: perhaps from a West African language, or related to jouk.    verbjo͝ok [with object]West Indian Pierce, poke, or stab.  a hoe to jook the ground in the yard  he jook the knife in the sheep and kill it dead one time  Example sentencesExamples -  Then I jooked it into his foot and it started bleeding and I saved the day, and tha's my story!
 -  They were interlopers on another level; they didn't just want a quick jook, they wanted land and bodies, and they cut down the forest and penetrated the land to have their way.
 -  Why don't these two cats just rent out a boxing ring, invite the press, hire a ref, get regulation gloves and quit jooking’ each other, as they say north of 125th street in Manhattan.
 -  I hope that if any more jooking takes place for the season you will be the donor and not the recipient!
 -  But, as Hurston found, the jooks were certainly not ‘safe.’
 
 
 Origin   Late 19th century: of uncertain origin: perhaps from a West African language, or related to juke.     |