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单词 cook
释义

cook

/kʊk /
verb
1 [with object] Prepare (food, a dish, or a meal) by mixing, combining, and heating the ingredients: shall I cook dinner tonight? [with two objects]: she cooked me eggs and bacon (as adjective cooked) a cooked breakfast...
  • When you're ready to prepare the dish, cook the pasta, drain it and set it aside.
  • Everyone then headed back to the school kitchens for a health and safety run-through before preparing and cooking the three-course meal.
  • In an ideal world, she said, everyone would prepare and cook their own meals without much salt and fat.

Synonyms

prepare, make, get, put together;
bake
informal fix, knock up, rustle up
1.1 [no object] (Of food) be heated so that the state required for eating is reached: while the rice is cooking, add the saffron to the stock...
  • Inside the immaculately clean kitchen, bacon cooked in a frying pan on the stove.
  • Many do feel that the food cooked in the microwave oven is not tasty.
  • Food cooked in a microwave oven does not present a radiation risk.
1.2 (cook something down) Heat food and cause it to thicken and reduce in volume: cooking down the chutney can take up to 45 minutes...
  • The idea is to blend the flavors and cook it down until the meat and potatoes are crisp, and the other vegetables are soft and caramelized.
  • In which case, the fruit wasn't cooked down enough.
  • Often the unfermented sweet grapes will be added to the wine, and sometimes the grape juice will be cooked down into a sweetened paste, which can be added to the wine to intensify it.
2 [with object] informal Alter dishonestly; falsify: a narcotics team who cooked the evidence...
  • When I heard that he had cooked his evidence, my first reaction was ‘how stupid’.
  • A scientist who believes in the Creator is suspected of cooking the evidence to support his belief.
  • Brinkley offers no evidence that the numbers were cooked or the questions were unfairly worded.

Synonyms

falsify, alter, doctor, tamper with, interfere with, massage, manipulate, rig, misrepresent;
forge
British informal fiddle
2.1 (be cooked) Be in an inescapably bad situation: if I can’t talk to him I’m cooked...
  • Certainly the subtext of Andersen's book is that we of the media class - even if he allows his alter ego a better fate - are cooked.
  • There was steam coming out of McLeish's ears from early yesterday, a sure sign that, like his team, the Rangers manager is also cooked.
3 [no object] (be cooking) informal Be happening or planned: what’s cooking on the alternative fuels front?...
  • Evidently this has been cooking for several months, but the word recently leaked out, and a paper has been rushed to the online edition of Science.
  • Meanwhile, more than 8,000 miles away in Mongolia, another egg surprise was cooking.

Synonyms

happen, go on, occur, take place
North American informal go down
4 [no object] North American informal Perform or proceed vigorously or very well: the band used to get up on the bandstand and really cook...
  • The album doesn't really get cooking until its second half, where the songs have agendas other than beating listeners senseless.
  • Luckily, these guys love to cook - whoever isn't cutting tracks is cooking!
  • By the end of their set, when they played ‘Burn Baby Burn’ from their new Free All Angels, they were really cooking.
noun
A person who prepares and cooks food, especially as a job or in a specified way: Susan was a school cook I’m a good cook...
  • I became aware of the cooks preparing food for us, and the servers serving us, and I began to feel grateful that they were all working so that I could sit!
  • The biggest change in food television over the last five years has been the move away from showing cooks prepare food to revealing how they manage their careers and lives.
  • One of the beautiful things about this open-plan restaurant is that you can watch the cooks prepare your food as you enjoy the surroundings.

Phrases

cook the books

cook someone's goose

too many cooks spoil the broth

Phrasal verbs

cook something up

Derivatives

cookable

adjective ...
  • But if a new product came onto the market that tasted like perfectly cooked lamb, contained only good things like protein and starch and vitamins, had minimal calories and was cookable in the microwave, could you avoid buying it?
  • I started pulling out cooking utensils to find any food that was cookable.
  • This invention relates to a coating for foodstuffs which is cookable by means of a microwave oven.

Origin

Old English cōc (noun), from popular Latin cocus, from Latin coquus.

  • The Old English coc, the early form of cook, was always male. The word was applied either to the domestic officer in charge of the preparation of food in a large household or to a tradesman who prepared and sold food. Women who prepared dinner started being called cooks in the mid 16th century. The root of the word is Latin coquus, also the source of concoct (mid 16th century) and biscuit. Cook has been used to mean ‘to tamper with’ since the 1630s, giving us cook the books, meaning ‘to alter records or accounts dishonestly’. The proverb too many cooks spoil the broth also dates back to the 16th century. It is not certain where the phrase cook someone's goose comes from. The reference could be to a goose being reared and fattened up for a forthcoming special occasion. Anyone who killed and cooked the goose before the proper time would have ruined the plans for the feast.

Rhymes

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更新时间:2024/11/12 8:29:36