释义 |
stoke I. \ˈstōk\ verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: Dutch stoken, from Middle Dutch, to thrust, poke, stoke; akin to Middle Low German stōken to poke, Middle Dutch stuken to push, shove, and probably to Old English stocc stock — more at stock transitive verb 1. : to poke or stir up (as a fire) : tend the fire of : supply with fuel or something resembling fuel < stoked the furnace expertly > < stoked the fire of his suspicions with lies > 2. : to feed abundantly or to excess : provide more than adequately with food < the scouts stoked themselves for the long hike ahead > intransitive verb 1. : to poke or stir up a fire : tend the fires of furnaces : supply a furnace with fuel 2. : to eat a big meal < the gang fell to and stoked in silence — Ronald Duncan > II. noun (-s) Etymology: after Sir George G. Stokes died 1903 British mathematician and physicist : the cgs unit of kinematic viscosity being that of a fluid which has a viscosity of one poise and a density of one gram per cubic centimeter III. adjective or stoke-on-trent \-ˈtrent\ Usage: usually capitalized S&T Etymology: from Stoke on Trent, England : of or from the city of Stoke on Trent, England : of the kind or style prevalent in Stoke on Trent |