释义 |
ˈcook-shop 1. Originally cook's shop. A shop where cooked food is sold; an eating-house. α1552Huloet, Cokes shope, popina. 1600Rowlands Let. Humours Blood iii. 9 Such vulgar diet with Cookes shops agree. 1625Massinger New Way ii. ii, The cooks shop in Ram Alley. 1710Addison Tatler No. 249. ⁋8 [He] carried me to a Cook's-Shop. 1726Amherst Terræ Fil. xlvii. (1741) 252 Frequenting..inns, cooks-shops, taverns. β1615E. Hoby Curry Combe for a Coxe-Combe 10 It seemes he hath..been brought vp..rather in a cooke-shop. 1677Act 29 Chas. II, c. 7. §3 In inns, cooke-shops, or victualling houses. 1851D. Jerrold St. Giles viii. 71 He dined and supped in an eastern cook-shop. 1856R. A. Vaughan Mystics (1860) II. 33 Running to and fro of boys from cook-shops. 2. N.Z. (See quot. 1933.)
1857St. Leonard's Station Diary 1 Jan. in L. R. C. MacFarlane Amuri (1946) iii. 123 Rum and plum duff at the cook shop. 1933L. G. D. Acland in Press (Christchurch) 30 Sept. 15/7 Cookshop, kitchen and dining room where station hands' food is cooked and eaten. It is sometimes a separate building, sometimes part of the men's hut. 1953B. Stronach Musterer on Molesworth ii. 8 The cookshop [on Molesworth Station] was an old army hut. |