| 释义 | poken.1Origin: Perhaps of multiple origins. Either (i) a borrowing from French. Or perhaps (ii) a borrowing from Dutch. Probably also partly a borrowing from early Scandinavian. Etymons: French poke, poche.Etymology: Either  <  Anglo-Norman and Old French regional (Flanders, Picardy) poke, Old French regional (northern) poque, pouque (1275; Middle French, French regional (northern) pouque, French regional (Normandy) poucque, variants of Old French, Middle French, French poche: see pouch n.), or perhaps  <  its (unattested) etymon in Old Dutch (compare Middle Dutch pōke   bag, measure of wool), cognate with Old Icelandic poki   bag, Danish regional poge   small bag, and probably Old English pohha  , (Northumbrian) pocca   bag (see pough n.), probably  <  the same Germanic base as pough n.; in Middle English probably reinforced by the early Scandinavian cognate of Old Icelandic poki  . Compare post-classical Latin poca  , poka  , pocum  , pokum   bale, measure of wool (1265, 1417, 1503 in British sources), bag, pouch (c1300 in a British source). Compare pung n.1Compare Irish póca  , Scottish Gaelic pòca   pocket, pouch, (small) bag, probably  <  English or early Scandinavian (compare the Old Icelandic form above). Compare also Irish pócóid   pouch (17th cent.), perhaps  <  French (see pocket n. and adj.). The α.  forms   all imply original lengthening of o   in open syllables in early Middle English (compare Middle Dutch pōke  ); the β.  forms   are unlengthened. The γ.  forms, also originally unlengthened, reflect the development in Older Scots of a back glide between short o   and a following velar plosive (see further  A. J. Aitken &  C. Macafee Older Sc. Vowels (2002) §16.4); spellings in -ol-   are reverse spellings reflecting earlier vocalization of l   (the rare U.S. regional form polk   (see α.  forms) is merely a modern respelling after words in -olk   (as folk n., yolk n.1)). It is unclear whether the following early examples should be interpreted as showing the Anglo-Norman or the Middle English word:1228    in  N. S. B. Gras Early Eng. Customs Syst. 		(1918)	 157  				i poke de alum, i d.1276    in  W. Illingworth Rotuli Hundredorum 		(1812)	 I. 388  				lx sacci lane & j puke. Now chiefly regional .  1. society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > bag > 			[noun]		 the world > relative properties > measurement > the scientific measurement of volume > measure(s) of capacity > 			[noun]		 > dry measure > specific dry measure units > bag or sack as unitβ. 1447     		(1880)	 24 b  				And of al vthir thinges pok, pak, and barel proporcionablie.1507    Bk. Rates 15 July in  N. S. B. Gras  		(1918)	 700  				Mather called crope or umbero the pocke.1599    Acct.-bk. W. Wray in   		(1896)	 32 243  				Item iij sakes, iij pokkes.1625    in  J. Barmby  		(1888)	 296  				Given for a pocke of coles, 2d.1685    G. Sinclair  124  				Giving the rogue fair words, and promising him his pock full of meal, with beaf and cheese.1733    in   I. 29  				Ye shall hae twa good pocks.?a1786    R. Burns  		(1968)	 I. 207  				They toom'd their pocks, they pawn'd their duds.1824    W. Scott  I. xi. 245  				The pock of siller.1862    A. Hislop  63  				Better the mother wi' the pock, than the faither wi' the sack.1880    W. T. Dennison  97  				He wus a pock a flesh an been.1988     52 70  				The saicont ane had a pock o chips, aa reikie an mingin wi vinegar.1994     Oct. 38/1  				A ten-year-old boy selling peanuts in Kingston City [Jamaica] shouted, ‘Peanuts! Peanuts! Six cents a pock!’γ. 1482    in  J. D. Marwick  		(1871)	 167  				Baith polk , pak and barell.a1513    W. Dunbar Flyting in   		(1998)	 I. 205  				Ȝe gang With polkis to mylne, and beggis baith meill and schilling.c1580    in  J. D. Marwick  I. 224  				For the custome of vj polkis of woll.a1600    MS Rec. Aberdeen XVI in   		(1880)	 III. 522/2  				Polk of wool.1632     26 July  				As for the pryce of tua seckis and ane pouk.1824    J. Mactaggart  344  				Why should I myself immure, Eternally 'mang powks and stoure.α.  c1300     		(Laud)	 		(1868)	 780 (MED)  				Hise pokes fulle of mele an korn. 1347–8     II. 215/2  				xi pokes de madder. c1405						 (c1390)						    G. Chaucer  		(Hengwrt)	 		(2003)	 l. 358  				They walwen as doon two pigges in a poke. 1411    in  W. H. Stevenson  		(1883)	 II. 86  				j. poke cum salt, vd. a1425    J. Wyclif  		(1869)	 I. 358  				Þan shulde pees be in þe Chirche Wiþouten strif of doggis in a poke. 1488    in  T. Thomson  		(1815)	 12  				In a canves poik within the said box tuelf hundreth & sevin angel nobilis. a1500    Tracts Eng. Weights & Meas. 16 in   		(1929)	 XV  				Also Woll ys sold by numbre and schipped to, as by sacks, sarplers, and pokys. 1558    in  J. P. Earwaker  		(1884)	 20  				Two secks and two lesse pookes. 1615    W. Lawson  		(1626)	 51  				A gathering Apron like a Poake. 1648    H. Hexham   				Koren-sack, a Corne-sack, or a corne-pooke. 1704    in   		(1895)	 I. 243  				Ffor a poke or bail of mather. 1723    J. Swift  17  				A pair of leathern pokes [rhyme folks]. 1764     1 3  				These pokes [of hops] are..carried..to the oust-house, where the hops are to be dried. 1824    W. Scott  I. xiii. 303  				The hair-brained goose saw the pokes. 1875     10 Mar. 2/5  				Bringing a poke of bran down a step-ladder. 1902     Nov. 17  				It usually comes in two-pound paper packages, or ‘pokes’. 1935    A. J. Cronin   i. ix. 68  				He had pie, too, in his poke. 1939    J. M. Caie  7  				A gangrel wife, her pyock upon her back. 1968     9 Nov. p. ii/2  				Take two pokes, and what you got was a gybe. Not that they ever agreed how much wool should go into a poke. 1996    C. Brookmyre  xvii. 108  				Her car reached the..roundabout, nothing else on the road but taxis and discarded chip pokes.the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > bag or pouch worn on person > 			[noun]		a1616    W. Shakespeare  		(1623)	  ii. vii. 20  				Then he drew a diall from his poake .       View more context for this quotation 1675    E. Cocker  6  				All are but Smoke To him that has no mony in his Poke. 1789    C. Vallancey Vocab. Lang. Forth & Bargie in   2 Antiquities 32  				Pooke, pocket. 1880    T. E. Webb tr.  J. W. von Goethe   iii. x. 183  				Apart from this I've nothing in my poke. 1930    G. Smithson  ii. 40  				He would relate to me..his nefarious exploits in picking ‘pokes’ (pockets), snatching ‘kettles’ (watches), and dropping ‘snide’ (passing counterfeit coin).society > trade and finance > money > place for keeping money > money-bag, -purse, or -belt > 			[noun]		 society > trade and finance > money > place for keeping money > wallet > 			[noun]		1859    G. W. Matsell  68  				Poke, a pocket; a purse. 1883     25 Jan. 2/3  				The poke, which a pick~pocket glories in having appropriated, is the Saxon bag or purse. 1908    J. M. Sullivan  18  				Poke of leather, a pocketbook. 1940    J. O'Hara  50  				There I was with only about $85 in my poke. 1976    ‘Trevanian’  		(1977)	 vi. 123  				I notice his wallet's half out of his pocket... It comes to me that I might as well lift his poke... So I reach over and pull it out. 1993    S. Kuriscak  42  				Poke, A wallet.society > trade and finance > money > 			[noun]		 society > trade and finance > money > medium of exchange or currency > paper money > 			[noun]		 > a banknote > roll of1926    J. Black  xiv. 190  				My hand was on the big fat ‘poke’. 1933    E. Seago  295  				Poke, money. 1965    L. J. Cunliffe  iv. 38  				It's a very satisfying feeling knowing you can put your finger on a bit of poke. (Which is more slang for money: get it, poke, loot, poppy—any of them will do!) 1984    S. Terkel  		(1985)	 Introd. 4  				One of the most satisfying moments during my brief turn as a ‘military man’ came at a crap game... I and several others lost our pokes in short order.  2. a1325     		(Trin. Cambr.)	 		(1929)	 529 (MED)  				Poke [v.rr. poke or bothom; the bothem, the boke; glossing Fr. Le gurget de nace revercez (a1325 Cambr.)]. c1350    Nominale 		(Cambr. Ee.4.20)	 in   		(1906)	 10*  				Et ou la gurget ne troue queche, In the poke but tundre.the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > net > 			[noun]		 > bag-net1579     		(1814)	 III. 147/1  				That destroyis the smoltis and fry of salmond..be polkis, creillis, trammel~nettis, and hery watteris. 1642    in  L. B. Taylor  		(1950)	 II. 347  				Nettis, creillis, herrie watter pockis or any uther ingyne for fishing of salmond. 1885    G. Fraser  47  				The free salmon fishing that proved sic a boon Tae the poor fisher-folk, Wi' their stake net and poke. 1901    T. P. Ollason  62  				Jemmy generally hed enouch ta dü ta keep his pok i'da watter an' himsell oot o't. 1956    U. Venables  vii  				A poke is a man's tool; it is roughly five feet across and a single scoop can catch about half a hundred weight. 1988    G. Lamb  at Pock  				Tae net sillocks wi a pock. the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > parts of clothing > 			[noun]		 > covering spec parts of body > arm > types of1402    Reply Friar Daw Topias in  T. Wright  		(1861)	 II. 69  				The pokes of purchace hangen to the erthe. ?a1475						 (?a1425)						    in  tr.  R. Higden  		(Harl. 2261)	 		(1882)	 VIII. App. 514  				Grete insolence of vesture..gownes with longe pokus, made in the maner of a bagpype. c1535      iii. sig. C.ivv  				Nowe ben preestes pokes so wyde That men must enlarge the vestement. 1706     		(new ed.)	 (at cited word)  				Pokes were also a sort of long-sleev'd Gowns, which Fashion grew so affected and extravagant, that the wearing of them was forbidden. 1957    M. B. Picken  260/2  				Poke, long, wide sleeve.the world > animals > fish > parts of fish > 			[noun]		 > stomachc1450    in  T. Austin  		(1888)	 114 (MED)  				Chauudon of fissh. Nym ye livere & ye poke. a1475						 (?a1430)						    J. Lydgate tr.  G. Deguileville  		(Vitell.)	 12856 (MED)  				I [sc. Glotonye]..efft ageyn do my labour (As an vngry wolff, certeyn) ffor to ffylle my pook [v.r. pawnche] ageyn. ?a1475    Noble Bk. Cookry in   (at cited word)  				To boile gurnard..Draw a gurnard at the belly..and slit the pok. 1774     		(Royal Soc.)	 64 117  				Mr. Hunter opened a charr..and found the poke, as our fishmongers call it, very different. 1825    J. Jennings  60  				Pook, the belly; the stomach. 1886    B. Brierley  xiii  				The encouraging injunction of our hostess to ‘fill yo'r pokes’, as she quaintly expressed herself. 1897     10 Sept. 2/1  				I once saw a gold ring taken out of a cod's poke. 1958    in   at Pock  				A sair poke. [Caithness, Wigtown.] 1996    C. I. Macafee  258/1  				Poke,..the tummy, the abdomen. 5. the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of internal organs > glandular disorders > 			[noun]		 > goitre1621    R. Burton   i. ii. ii. i. 95  				Aubanus Bohemus referres that Struma, or poke of the Bauarians & Styrians to the nature of their waters. 1673    J. Ray  143  				We saw..many men and women with large swellings under their chins..called..by some in English, Bavarian Pokes. 1720    C. Mather  xxxii. 225  				What should we do with a Bavarian Poke under our chins? 1819    J. Keats  		(1947)	 404  				Her breath stink all over the room, her nose drop winter and summer, with a Bavarian poke under her chin.the world > health and disease > ill health > animal disease or disorder > disorders of sheep > 			[noun]		 > rot1793    J. Sinclair  VI. 271  				Numbers [of sheep] often die, during the course of winter and spring, of what are here called the rott, pock, and scab. a1800    in   6 74  				My sheep took the pock and my horse was stown awa'. 1802    C. Findlater  403  				The lungs are found to be tuberculous; the animal coughs; and, in the progress of weakness, an oedematous swelling, called in Scotland the pock, or poak, is formed under the jaw. a1835    J. Hogg  		(1837)	 I. 275  				It never saw either braxy or breakwind, bleer-ee nor Beltan pock, but was the cantiest crock o' the Kaim-law. 1878    W. Dickinson  		(ed. 2)	 76/1  				Sheep tainted with rot often exhibit the symptom of a poke or bag under the jaws. 1996    C. I. Macafee  258/1  				Poke,..in sheep a disease: rot [from the pouch-like swelling that appears under the jaw]. 1883    J. T. Brown Whale Fishery & Appliances in   		(1884)	 No. 27. 304  				When the whale ceases its progressive motions the poke or buoy appears on the surface and the line is regained. 1887    G. B. Goode  II. 270  				When the ‘pokes’ are used, the officer gives the order to ‘Blow up! Blow up!’ and a man with sound lungs grasps one of these membranous pouches and inflates it... It is then attached to the whale. 1931    D. M. LeBourdais  73  				The spear would not kill them [sc. walruses] outright,..but attached to it was a long sealskin line at the end of which was fastened an inflated sealskin bag called a pok.Compounds the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > arboreal families > 			[noun]		 > family Aegithalidae > genus Aegithalos (long-tailed titmouse)1663    Assembly Proc. in   		(1883)	 I. 472  				They had found the Silke stuffe which made only 3 Poke Baggs. 1885    C. Swainson  32  				The penduline form of the nest, and the feathers which compose the lining, have obtained for the bird the names of..Poke pudding or Poke bag (Gloucestershire; Salop)... Feather poke. 1895     28 Nov.  				Lost. A poke bag, Wednesday evening. 1988    G. Somerset  7  				Inside [the general store c1900] were treasures of all kinds..chocolate buttons in poke bags, and..the wonderful penny classics we loved.1799    J. Banister  229  				This office may be performed by a lad, who from the nature of his employment is called a poke boy. 1805    R. W. Dickson  II. 753  				[Hops] Another person will be requisite in the hop-plantation,..to pick up the scattered branches of the binds, and convey the produce to the kiln. A boy is in general employed in this business, who..is commonly called the poke boy. 1916    E. Blunden  24  				While through the avenues of hops The measurers and the poke-boys go.a1568    A. Montgomerie  liv. 2  				Fyndlay McConnoquhy, fuf McFadȝan, Cativilie geilȝie with ye poik~braik. ?c1615     		(1830)	 151  				The careyaris of wictuellis, quhilkis wes boyis callit in Eirsche pok-braikis.the world > life > the body > external parts of body > head > face > cheek > 			[adjective]		 > types of cheek > having1843    T. Carlyle Let. 16 Aug. in   		(1990)	 XVII. 54  				A long soft poke-cheeked face, with busy anxious black eyes.the world > animals > fish > 			[adjective]		 > caught by hook into stomach1883     25 902/1  				Many..fish..are caught, not by the hook entering the jaws of the fish, but because it is fastened in their stomach,..a fish so captured is called ‘poke-hooked’. 1938     Sept. 260/1  				When the representative of the Neolithic period fished in that lake in the valley of the Somme, all the fish he took must have been poke-hooked.the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > family Equidae (general equines) > horse defined by purpose used for > 			[noun]		 > pack-horse > with particular type of loads1669    Gateshead Church Bk. in  R. O. Heslop  		(1894)	 (at cited word)  				Bring all the Poke-horses that trespasse upon the ffell into the comon pinefold. 1894    R. O. Heslop   				Poke-horse, a pack horse. Lead ore was formerly transported from the mine to the smelt mill in pokes, carried by galloways on the top of a wood saddle.1583    in  J. D. Marwick  		(1882)	 IV. 303  				Leith, stingmen, polkmen and metters... Anent the polkmen, off ilk boll of quheitt [etc.]..for setting on the schoir, ane penny. 1664    J. Nicholson Diurnals 27 Feb. in   (at cited word)  				To the pokmen for 200 bolls bier carrying to Geo. Black his boat according to 12 d. per boll.1668    Haddington Burgh Rec. 10 Nov. in   (at cited word)  				The firlots and pecks of the beir, ait, malt and pock mercats are sett to Robert Smyth for the yeir to come. 1844    J. Miller  524  				Bear, malt, oat, and pock markets.the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > fishing-tackle > net > 			[noun]		 > bag-net1442     (MED)  				[Poacher] cum canibus pucsnetts. 1693    in  R. Renwick  		(1889)	 II. 68  				That pretended right of the Lady Alvas to fish with pock netts. 1792    J. Sinclair  II. 16  				Pock-net fishing..is performed by fixing stakes or stours (as they are called) in the sand. 1845     XIV. 165  				Catching fresh water fish with a kind of pock-net. 1994     3 June 19/2  				As for poke nets they are nothing new.society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > kinsman or relation > child > 			[noun]		 > youngest child the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > order Artiodactyla (cloven-hoofed animals) > pig > 			[noun]		 > young > litter > runt1808    J. Jamieson   				Pock-shakings.., a vulgar term, used to denote the youngest child of a family... It often implies the idea of something puny in appearance. 1844    H. Stephens  II. 700  				The small weak pigs are usually nicknamed wrigs, or pock shakings. 1931    in   at Pock  				Ay, I had a big femly: thir twaa here are jist the pokeshakins. 1985    A. Blair  xii. 102  				They were my proudest possession they dishes, for many a long year. Forbye them, we started off wi' just a few poke-shakin's he had of his mother's, a bit cutlery, a few towels a pot an' that.the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > parts of clothing > 			[noun]		 > covering spec parts of body > arm > types of1592    J. Stow  519  				Gownes with deepe and broade sleeues, commonly called poke sleeues. 1714     No. 619. ⁋9  				My learned Correspondent who writes against Master's Gowns and Poke Sleeves. 1957    M. B. Picken  511/2  				Poke sleeve, obsolete type of sleeve, cut long and wide.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).poken.2Origin: Probably formed within English, by conversion. Or perhaps a variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymons: poke v.1; poke n.1Etymology: Probably  <  poke v.1, with reference to the brim poking out or projecting (and thus etymologically identical with poke n.5), or perhaps a specific use of poke n.1, with reference to its shape or appearance. 1. the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > parts of headgear > 			[noun]		 > projecting frontc1614    in   		(1870)	 137  				Ane exceiding fyne gray felt hait withe ane poik of gray tafetie and ane gray cyperis band weill imbrowderit. 1631    R. Brathwait  15  				[They] take delight in wearing..huge poakes to shroud their phantasticke heads. 1682    in   		(1876)	 App. 610/1  				[Earl of Aberdeen, Chancellor] for a pock to my lords hatt, 7 s. 10 d. 1770    Lady M. Coke  28 Dec.  				The headdress..must be black, that is to say the poke and the lappits, but upon the head you are permitted to wear the ribbon of the colour of your robe. 1813    Lady Burghersh  		(1893)	 61  				An immense quilling of lace or ribbon round the poke. 1859    ‘G. Eliot’  III.  vi. l. 222  				The close poke of her little black bonnet hid her face from him. 1896    G. F. Northall  180  				Poke, a peak; as ‘The poke of a cap.’ SE. Worc. 1957    M. B. Picken  260/2  				Poke, projecting front brim of bonnet. 1990    L. Todd  130  				What happened my pixie.., the one wi' the poke?the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > parts of headgear > 			[noun]		 > hood or brim to protect face1859    G. A. Sala  xxix. 341  				Ladies..with blue pokes to their bonnets. ?1884    E. A. Hunter in  M. M. Dodge  125  				Miss Polly Betsey Patterson, In a Mother Hubbard cloak And a Mother Hubbard bonnet, With a most bewitching poke. 1957    M. B. Picken  260/2  				Poke, detachable hat brim worn by women in mid-19th century. the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > 			[noun]		 > hat > other the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > 			[noun]		 > hood > other1632    in   		(1896)	 App. III. 235  				Ane nicht pok of blew, imbroderit with gold. 1646    Edinb. Test. LXII. f. 128v, in   (at cited word)  				Nyne pocks or huids estimat all to xiij lib. 1681    S. Colvil   i. 83  				Like gilliwetfoots purging states By papers thrown in pocks or hats.the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > 			[noun]		 > woman's bonnet > types of > poke bonnet the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > 			[noun]		 > woman's bonnet > types of > worn by specific people1815    Countess Granville  6 Sept. 		(1894)	 I. 78  				Miss Smith in a little crushed muslin poke. 1839    T. Hood Lit. & Literal in   380  				They came—each ‘Pig-faced Lady’, in that bonnet We call a poke. 1876    ‘G. Eliot’  II.  iii. xxiv. 134  				A grey frieze livery and a straw poke, such as my aunt's charity children wear. 1896    G. M. Stisted  xi. 269  				[In Salt Lake City] A poke-bonnet was universally worn—why is the Poke a symbol of piety, Quakers, Salvationists, Mormons, Sisters of Mercy retiring alike inside its ungraceful shape? 1921     Jan. 15/3  				There was a smart tailored [hat] of brown satin, a cunning poke for a wee maiden.the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > neck-wear > 			[noun]		 > collar1908    ‘O. Henry’  147  				With only feetwear and a dozen 15½ English pokes in his shopping bag. 1924     27 Apr. 6  				Poke, a collar.Compounds the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > parts of headgear > 			[noun]		 > projecting front1879     7 June  				Polka-dotted Swiss muslin covers part of the poke brim plainly, and is gathered back to form a puffed Alsacian bow on the crown. 1928     27 Feb. 17/6  				The black straw hat has a poke brim and flat scarlet trimming. 1993    S. Stewart  iii. 12  				Deep as a covered waggon was the poke-brim of that black sunbonnet with her old..face nestlin beady-eyed in the back.the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > 			[adjective]		 > hat > having a brim > other1899     3 June 8/3  				The poke-brimmed hat, reminiscent of the thirties, is in cream-coloured straw trimmed with tulle. 1939     12 Feb.  c1/3  				Carolyn..will wear a short aqua blue taffeta dress..and her poke brimmed hat.1898     1 Oct. 7/3  				The shirts may be made opening in front with a straight standing poke collar and round-cornered link cuffs attached. 1924     12 Dec. 8/3  				You see the poke collar, a comparatively rare style, together with a white tie having a snug knot and outspread ends. 1969    R. T. Wilcox  81/1  				Poke collar, a stiff standing collar with slight front opening and points softly bent forward. Early twentieth century.the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > 			[noun]		 > cap > types of > other1810     II. 106  				Her hair was..adorned with a poke-fly cap, and long lace lappets.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).poken.3Origin: A borrowing from Algonquian. Etymon: Algonquian apooke.Etymology:  <  Virginia Algonquian apooke tobacco, literally ‘thing for smoking’. Obsolete. the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > tobacco > 			[noun]		 > substitutes for tobacco the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > yielding drug or narcotic > 			[noun]		 > tobacco-plant > varieties of1588    T. Hariot  sig. C3  				There is an herbe..called by the inhabitants uppówoc... The Spaniardes call it Tobacco. c1612    W. Strachey  		(1953)	  i. x. 122  				There is here great store of Tobacco which the Saluages call Apooke.]			 1634     		(1865)	 20  				After this, was brought..a great Bagg, filled with a large Tobacco-pipe and Poake, which is the word they vse for our Tobacco. 1672    J. Josselyn  54  				Tobacco,..the Indians make use of a small kind with short round leaves called Pooke. 1792    J. Belknap  III. 126  				A running vine, bearing a small berry, and a round leaf, which Josselyn (who wrote in 1672) says, the fishermen called poke; it is known to the hunters by the name of Indian tobacco. 1798     1st Ser. V. 57  				He then wishing to smoke a pipe, ransacked the island for tobacco; but, finding none, filled his pipe with poke, a weed which the Indians sometimes used as its substitute. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2006; most recently modified version published online December 2020).poken.4Origin: Apparently a borrowing from Algonquian. Etymon: Algonquian pocan.Etymology: Apparently  <  Algonquian pocan (see pocan n.). Compare earlier poke n.3the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Phytolaccaceae (poke-weed and allies) > 			[noun]		1687    J. Clayton Let. in   		(Royal Soc.)	 		(1742)	 41 150  				When they design to give a Purge, they make use of..Poake-root, i.e. Solanum bacciferum. 1708    W. Byrd Let. 10 Sept. in   		(1921)	 1 190  				We call the plant here [i.e. in Virginia] Poke; it bears a purple berry. 1733    P. Miller   				Phytolacca,..American Nightshade,..commonly call'd Virginian Poke or Porke Physick. 1769    W. Stork  19  				Phytolacca octandra... In Mexico, like Virginia poke. 1802    J. Drayton  70  				Poke. (Phytolacca decandria.) Grows on rich land. The young sprouts of it are used in the spring for soup. 1866    J. Lindley  & T. Moore  II. 885/2  				The Pocan, or Virginian Poke or Poke-weed, is a branching herbaceous plant, with a smooth green or sometimes purplish stem..with large green or purplish leaves. 1908    A. R. Harding  		(rev. ed.)	 xxiii. 265  				Pokeweed. Phytolacca decandra L. a... Poke, pigeon-berry,..Virginia poke, inkberry,..American nightshade. 1945     13 May  vii. 1/3  				Opal had found the first tightly curled leaves of poke, the best known of all Ozark greens. 1977    W. H. Lewis  & M. P. F. Elvin-Lewis  iv. 90/1  				Poke..has long been a favorite spring potherb in the southern United States.the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Liliaceae family or plants > 			[noun]		 > white or swamp hellebore1785    M. Cutler in   1 492  				Veratrum... White Helebore. Poke-root. Indian Poke. Common in wet meadows and swamps. 1850    A. Wood  		(ed. 10)	 557  				V[eratrum] viride... Poke. White Hellebore... The root is emetic and stimulant, but poisonous, and should be used with caution. 1879    R. Bartholow  		(ed. 3)	 455  				Poke has been proposed as an emetic, but..the great depression of the powers of life which it causes..will ever prevent its employment. 1931    E. O. Essig  vii. 449  				The American white hellebore or Indian poke, V[eratrum] viride. 1996     238  				Indian Poke. This is a splendid and noble species from North America for a moist shady position in the border.Compounds the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Phytolaccaceae (poke-weed and allies) > 			[noun]		 the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Phytolaccaceae (poke-weed and allies) > 			[adjective]		 > of or relating to poke-weed1754    M. Catesby  & G. Edwards  		(rev. ed.)	 II. Index  				Poke berries, poison. 1834    W. A. Caruthers  II. 215  				His face looks like it was boiled in poke-berry juice and indigo. 1911    G. Stratton-Porter  xiii. 252  				Pokeberry!.. Roots bring five cents a pound. Good blood purifier. 1974    A. Dillard  xiv. 249  				A skin-colored sandstone ledge beside me was stained with pokeberry juice. 2004     		(Nexis)	 10 Jan. 		(Ontario ed.)	 (Life section)  l4  				1910: Phytoline weight-loss tablets contained arsenic, strychnine, caffeine and pokeberries. Arsenic speeds up the digestive tract; pokeberries act as a laxative.the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > vegetables > leaf vegetables > 			[noun]		 > other leaves1848     31 222  				The southern negro will dance after eating his poke-greens and bacon. 1938    M. K. Rawlings  i. 12  				There were poke-greens with bits of white bacon buried in them. 1990    T. C. Boyle  i. 39  				White sliced a cucumber and tomato, fixed a side dish of poke greens.the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Asclepiadaceae (milk-weed and allies) > 			[noun]		1890      				Poke-milkweed, an American plant, Asclepias phytolaccoides, with some resemblance to pokeweed. 1902     254  				After poke is named the ‘poke milkweed’ (Asclepias phytolaccoides), also called ‘poke-leaved milkweed’ and ‘poke-leaved silkweed’. 1993     47 107/2  				Rates of gene flow via pollen into populations of insect-pollinated herbaceous species ranged..as high as 10% in a poke milkweed population isolated from conspecifics by 1 km.the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular medicinal plants or parts > 			[noun]		 > hellebores or medicinal hellebores the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Liliaceae family or plants > 			[noun]		 > white or swamp hellebore the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > medical preparations of specific origin > medicine composed of a plant > 			[noun]		 > plant used in medicine > specific plant > poke-weed the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > medical preparations of specific origin > medicine composed of a plant > 			[noun]		 > plant used in medicine > root > specific roots1687poake-root [see sense  1].							1785    M. Cutler in   1 492  				Veratrum... White Helebore. Poke-root. Indian Poke. Common in wet meadows and swamps. 1811     8 May  				[For a cancer cure] take pocoon root, finely powdered, etc... Take young poke-root roasted [etc.]. 1905    E. A. U. Valentine  65  				I'm sure I'd never trust him after he nearly poisoned you all, mistaking poke-root for burdock. 1995     		(Royal Hort. Soc.)	 Nov. 663/3  				If you were looking for something a little more unusual, Jekka's Herb Farm brought a selection of ‘poke roots’, tall, herbaceous plants with pink flowers, to the Show.the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > vegetables > leaf vegetables > 			[noun]		 > poke-weed1877     4 Apr.  				Poke salad is famous for this sort of business. Longfellow and a great many other fellows used to cry for it when they were babies. 1913    H. Kephart  xiii. 282  				This poke salat eats good. 1992    N. Cohn  xviii. 320  				It had a vaguely Southern look, a whiff of boondocks and poke salad.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).poken.5Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: poke v.1 I.  The action of poking (in various senses).  1. the world > movement > impact > striking > striking with specific thing > 			[noun]		 > with the hand > with the fist the world > movement > impact > striking > striking in specific manner > 			[noun]		 > striking with pushing action > poking or prodding > a poke or prod1690    W. Mountfort   iii. i. 30  				Well said Conscience, Let me go dog; Let me have but one poke at him. 1788    J. Cobb   ii. 46  				It be so charmant to see Jack Roast Beef ven he be enragé,..ven dey give him little poke, and rouze him up. 1796     		(ed. 3)	  				Poke, a blow with the fist; I'll lend you a poke. 1831     1 155  				With a poke at the fire to make it blaze the brighter. 1847    C. Dickens  		(1848)	 xvii. 166  				The Captain, making a poke at the door with the knobby stick to assure himself that it was shut. 1849    E. Bulwer-Lytton  III.  xvii. i. 207  				With a sly look..giving me a poke in the ribs. 1936    J. Steinbeck  viii. 120  				‘They got those cops here quick,’ said Burke. ‘I'd like to take a poke at a few of 'em.’ 1988    M. Warner  xxi. 223  				Children climbed up lamp posts to get a view until the Civil Guard ordered them down with a poke of their cudgels. 1995    J. Miller  v. 86  				We just seem to have developed an irreverent style, having a poke at everyone.the world > action or operation > advantage > 			[noun]		 > an advantage, benefit, or favourable circumstance > a benefit > that makes happy or prosperous > minimally1844    R. H. Barham in   Feb. 326  				Didn't his Majesty call it all flummery, Scorning The warning, And get the next morning His poke in the eye from that clumsy Montgomery? 1852    ‘G. Eliot’  4 Dec. 		(1954)	 II. 71  				‘Then,’ he said..‘Here are those “Letters from Ireland” which I hope will be something better than a poke in the eye.’ 1881    S. Evans  		(new ed.)	 273  				‘A poke i' the eye wi' a burnt stick’, is a phrase setting up a sort of standard by which to estimate the desirability of any existing or hypothetical contingency. 1944    J. Cary  xvi. 81  				Anarchists who love God always fall for Spinoza because he tells them that God doesn't love them. This is just what they need. A poke in the eye. 1961    F. Brown  x. 125  				It would be thirty-seven bucks and some odd cents. I told him that that was better than a poke in the eye with a sharp stick. 2004     		(Nexis)	 26 Jan.  a30  				There's not a lot of money in Australia to make a living from it so even if you come home with a couple of hundred dollars it's better than a poke in the eye.society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > batting > 			[noun]		 > types of stroke1853    F. Gale  54  				Sticker gets his runs by quiet little pokes one at a time. 1896    W. J. Ford in   Sept. 278  				Besides..‘the draw’, there was another weapon forged for the armoury of him for whom leg-hitting was not—viz. the ‘Cambridge Poke’, so called, I believe, in contemptuous irony. 1928     2 June 5/1  				Though he is horrid in his occasional aimless poke at rising balls, his late cut, when he does get over the ball, is very, very good. 1960    J. Fingleton  xvi. 133  				He was confusing the cut with the ‘poke’, a disastrous nibbling by so many Englishmen. 2005     		(Nexis)	 14 Jan. 36  				There were a welter of fours among the nudges and pokes, including an uncharacteristic straight drive for six.1894     17 June  				If old rules were permitted to stand he would be compelled to decide between a bunted ball and the consumptive off spring [sic] of a hard poke. 1919     27 Aug. 12/1  				Fletcher got a poke to Ponder, who tossed the ball home while Burns slid in safely. 1988    R. Angell  		(1989)	 i. 14  				In the ninth he pulled down a mighty poke..after running at full tilt from mid-center field into deep left center. 2004     		(Electronic ed.)	 Apr. 58  				Bobby Clampett could average more than 260 yards off the tee (276 yards per poke led the PGA Tour in 1982). the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual activity > 			[noun]		 > sexual intercourse > an act of the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual partner > 			[noun]		 > specifically female1902    J. S. Farmer  & W. E. Henley  V. 242  				Poke,..an act of coition. 1958    N. Levine  ii. 83  				When I meet her I only want a poke. Then she tell me a baby made. 1968    H. C. Rae   ii. i. 77  				‘Caroline’, said Derek..‘wouldn't make a good poke for a blind hunchback.’ 1977     11 Aug. 184/4  				Turning a series of squalid pokes into a series of honourable combats. 1991     9 Oct. 25/1  				So you take a potential poke out to dinner or to the pictures. 2000     June 100/1  				Every time he sees me he comes and says, ‘How about a poke, little darlin’?the world > matter > physics > energy or power of doing work > 			[noun]		 > capacity for exertion of mechanical force > power or rate of work known as horse-power1965    R. T. Bickers  vi. 69  				With all that extra poke under the bonnet. 1971    C. Bonington  xiv. 183  				Martin and Nick have done a terrific job [on the climb], but I think they've burnt themselves out in doing it. We must have some real poke out in front, and I just don't think they've got it any longer. 1979     1 July 3/5  				I expect you'd prefer something with a bit more poke. A Ferrari say, or an Aston Martin. 1986     Sept. 44/1  				I obviously fitted in with his idea of a British airgunner who wanted a pistol with a bit of poke. 2005     		(Nexis)	 11 Mar. 14  				It was tweaked to produce a fraction more poke and drink less petrol.society > computing and information technology > hardware > 			[noun]		 > primary storage or main memory > function for altering contents society > computing and information technology > programming language > 			[noun]		 > high-level language > statements or functions in BASIC1978    M. Waite  & M. Pardee  v. 159  				PEEK and POKE (EXAM and FILL in some BASICS) allow direct control over individual memory locations. 1984    J. Campbell  iii. 40  				Another way that you may control the positioning of the cursor is to use the POKE instruction. 1990     Apr. 73/2  				I cannot get off the third scene, will you please! please! send me a poke for infinite time or the ability to skip levels. Any poke will do. 2000     		(Nexis)	 27 Apr.  				Those of us..who turn pale at the thought of..typing commands such as PEEK and POKE.1992     15 Sept. 23/6  				On arrival, the patrolman had a poke around the car. 1999    M. Sawyer  		(2000)	 v. 96  				Everyone wanted..a nosy poke round someone else's cupboards. 2001    4 × 4 Dec. (Land Rover Defender Suppl.) 27/3  				I was having a general poke and prod around under the bonnet..when I noticed the serpentine fan belt was beginning to show signs of cracking.  II.  A thing that pokes. the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > general equipment > 			[noun]		 > restraining frame1809    E. A. Kendall  II. 198  				A hog..by some mischance had turned his poke, so that his throat was squeezed into one of the acuter angles. 1859    J. G. Holland  iv. 43  				We put a poke upon a vicious cow. 1875    E. H. Knight   				Poke, a device..to prevent its [sc. an animal's] jumping over, crawling through, or breaking down fences... They vary with the kind of stock to which they are attached,—horses, cattle, hogs, or geese. 1949    R. J. Sim  105  				Such a rig is known as a ‘poke’. It is put on the neck of a critter with fence-jumping inclinations. 1956    W. R. Bird  viii. 220  				And here were some sheep, too, with pokes. 1994     		(Nexis)	 15 Oct.  				Pictured..is a wooden poke, used to keep sheep, goats and calves from getting through fences.  III.  A person who pokes. the world > action or operation > inaction > disinclination to act or listlessness > sloth or laziness > 			[noun]		 > lazy person1847     30 Sept.  				What slowpoke ever benefitted the world, his friends, or himself. 1848    J. R. Bartlett   				Poke, a lazy person, a dawdle; as ‘what a slow poke you are!’ A woman's word. 1856    W. G. Simms  247  				‘Did you pick up any fellows?’ ‘A few pokes—not much; but they hev horses.’ 1875    A. Daly Big Bonanza  i. i, in   		(1942)	 XX. 179  				I think the professor is a perfect old poke, and Caroline is as haughty as Trinity steeple, with her nonsensical airs. 1888    F. T. Elworthy  (at cited word)  				A riglur old poke, one step to-day and another to-morrow. 1905    D. G. Phillips  49  				All the drones and pokes and nobodies are just crazy about..trying to make out they're somebody. 1934    M. H. Weseen  380  				Poke, a bore; a poor companion; a stupid person; a lazy person. 1965–70     		(1996)	 III. 241/2  				Q[uestion]. A dull and stupid person. [Indiana, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, Vermont] Poke.Compounds  With adverbs, frequently corresponding to senses of poke v.1 the world > food and drink > food > meal > picnic or packed meal > 			[noun]		 > barbecue the world > action or operation > endeavour > searching or seeking > finding or discovery > find or discover			[verb (transitive)]		 > find by other specific means society > society and the community > social attitudes > philanthropy > 			[noun]		 > charitableness or alms-giving > that which is given in charity the world > food and drink > food > supply of food or provisions > gift or offering of food > 			[noun]		 > food parcel > for tramp the world > action or operation > endeavour > searching or seeking > 			[noun]		 > types of search or searching > rummaging or thorough searching > an act of1874    J. Ruskin Let. in   		(1887)	 3  				We go into the Sacristy and have a reverent little poke out of relics. 1894    ‘J. Flynt’ in   Mar. 713/2  				He returned with a ‘poke-out’ (food given at the door). 1907    J. London  12  				I could ‘throw my feet’ with the next one when it came to ‘slamming a gate’ for a ‘poke-out’ or a ‘set-down’. 1937    ‘D. Boyle’  iv. 55  				Yuh sure can batter 'em for a poke-out. 1986    R. L. Chapman  		(1987)	 332/2  				Poke-out, food, esp that handed out in a package from a back door.the mind > attention and judgement > enquiry > investigation, inspection > inspection, survey > 			[noun]		1901    ‘L. Malet’   vi. vii  				We could ride over that..land and have a poke round for sites. 1987    W. J. Burley  		(BNC)	 151  				I expect his mother comes in from time to time and has a good old poke round.the world > movement > impact > striking > striking in specific manner > 			[noun]		 > striking with pushing action > pushing > a push1905     18 Aug. 3/1  				All the birds sit so close that ‘good dog Ponto’ almost has to give them a poke-up with his..nose to induce them to rise at all.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022).poken.6Origin: Formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymon: shitepoke n.Etymology: Shortened  <  shitepoke n. U.S. regional. Now rare . the world > animals > birds > freshwater birds > order Ciconiiformes (storks, etc.) > 			[noun]		 > family Ardeidae (herons and bitterns) > butorides virescens (green heron)1791    W. Bartram   ii. x. 293  				A[rdea] viriscens [sic]; the green bitern or poke. 1844      ii. 224  				The Poke, Chalk-line, Fly-up-the-creek, or Schyte Poke as he was called by our Dutch ancestors, is a southern species. 1883     17 432  				The great American bittern... From its common attitude of rest, with its bill pointing straight up,..it has gained the names ‘look-up’, and ‘garde-soleil’. The name ‘poke’ may refer to the same thing, but more probably to its slow, awkward movements. 1920     May 75/1  				‘Poke’ (little green herons) were more numerous than humans. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).poken.7Origin: A borrowing from Hawaiian. Etymon: Hawaiian poke.Etymology:  <  Hawaiian poke slice, piece.1978    H. J. Fortner  45  				Recipes include the very popular Hawaiian poke and lomi salmon. 1996    R. Laudan  37  				A little raggedness in the bits of poke is no matter. 2019     		(Nexis)	 22 Mar. 49  				Poke bowls typically combine sliced fresh fish such as sushi salmon and ahi tuna with sushi rice, fresh salad and tropical fruits.This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, September 2019; most recently modified version published online March 2022).pokev.1Origin: Of multiple origins. Apparently either (i) a borrowing from Dutch. Or (ii) a borrowing from Middle Low German. Etymons: Dutch pōken; Middle Low German pōken.Etymology: Apparently either  <  Middle Dutch pōken to stoke (a fire), to stab, also ‘to thrust, push’ (Dutch poken to stoke (a fire)), or  <  its cognate Middle Low German pōken to thrust with a knife or dagger, or perhaps the reflex of an Old English cognate of these words (see note); Middle Dutch pōken and Middle Low German pōken are related to Middle Dutch poke dagger, poker (Dutch pook poker), Middle Low German pōk dagger, large knife (German regional (Low German) pook), all ultimately of unknown origin. It is not clear if the verbs or nouns are primary in Middle Low German and Middle Dutch.The existence of an Old English verb pucian   to jab, incite, urge, is perhaps shown by the following gloss (although the reading is disputed):OE    Prudentius Glosses 		(Boulogne 189)	 in  Anzeiger f. Kunde der teutschen Vorzeit 		(1839)	 8 242/3  				Repens medullas [indoles] afflarat : pucigende in mearga gindbleaw.The glossator appears to be rendering Latin repens   new, sudden (an adjective modifying indoles   innate goodness) rather freely with pucigende   that incites, that urges (compare sense  3). This interpretation seems preferable to the assumption that the glossator has mistaken repens   for the present participle of classical Latin rēpere   to creep, crawl (a sense which does not answer well to any attested sense of poke v.1), or to the conclusion of H. D. Meritt ( Old Eng. Prudentius Glosses (1959) 68), who reads piuigende   (not pucigende  ), which he sees as implying the existence of an otherwise unattested verb pyfian  , a weak Class II by-form of pyffan  puff v.   Scottish Gaelic pùc   to push, jostle is apparently  <  Scots. With Irish poc   to strike (e.g. a hurling ball) (with short vowel) compare perhaps pock n.2   The β.  forms   apparently show the result of raising of the vowel to Middle English ū  , perhaps as a result of the position before k   (compare  E. J. Dobson Eng. Pronunc. 1500–1700 (ed. 2, 1968) §151). Apparently attested earlier in the surname of William Pokekertelle   (1224); compare sense  5. I.  General uses.  1. the world > movement > impact > striking > striking in specific manner > strike in specific manner			[verb (transitive)]		 > strike with pushing action > poke or prodc1330						 (?a1300)						     		(Auch.)	 p. 552  				Þer com þe fischer priueliche, & puked þemperour softliche; His tale to him he told. c1405						 (c1390)						    G. Chaucer  		(Hengwrt)	 		(2003)	 l. 249  				Aleyn the clerc..poked [v.rr. pouked on, poukede] Iohn and seyde slepestow. a1450						 (c1410)						    H. Lovelich  		(1932)	 III. l. 25365  				Boors..gan hym dyht there as kyng Ameuȝ ȝit lay Stylle..and with his swerd he poked hym þere vppon his Scheld jn diuers Manere. a1475						 (?a1430)						    J. Lydgate tr.  G. Deguileville  		(Vitell.)	 13849  				An Aungel..Pookede hym and made hym ryse. a1500						 (?c1450)						     367 (MED)  				He..putte the poynte of his swerde on his shelde, and be-gan to pouke [Fr. bouter] hym, and cleped, ‘Rise up, Kynge Amaunt.’   1828    N. Webster   				Poke,..to thrust at with the horns, as an ox; a popular use of the word in New England. 1839    C. Dickens  xviii. 169  				‘You naughty creature!’ said the lively lady, poking the peer with her parasol. 1878    E. W. Clark  90  				One of my bearers poked him [sc. a snake] gently with a stick. 1889    D. E. Hurst  		(ed. 2)	 Gloss.  				Doant goo into that field, may be you'll be pooked [by a bull or cow] if you do. 1909    J. London Chinago in   July 237/1  				He poked the Chinago in the ribs, and chuckled. 1922    J. Joyce   ii. xiii. [Nausicaa] 347  				Cissy poked him..out of fun in his wee fat tummy. 1987    P. Farmer  		(1988)	 53  				Janey chooses to poke her little brother.the world > movement > impelling or driving > pushing and pulling > push and pull			[verb (transitive)]		 > push the world > space > place > placing or fact of being placed in (a) position > insertion or putting in > insert or put in			[verb (transitive)]		 > into or as into other specific receptacles the world > space > relative position > posture > action or fact of stretching body > stretch			[verb (transitive)]		 > specific part of body > in some direction, purposefully the world > health and disease > ill health > injury > injure			[verb (transitive)]		 > wound > wound with sharp weapon society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > cut of sharp weapon > cut or penetrate (of weapon)			[verb (transitive)]		 > strike with pointed weapona1425    J. Wyclif  		(1869)	 I. 12 (MED)  				Cast first þe beeme out of þin owne eye, and þan maist þou poke beter þe mot fro þi broþir. 1665    J. Phillips tr.  P. Scarron   v. 147  				Hercules that then stood by, Pokes out his other [eye]. 1675    J. Smith   i. 20  				To poak out Leviathan, from under that shelf of prejudice. 1700    T. Brown  ix. 97  				One of them would have been poking a Cranes Bill down his Throat. 1781    F. Burney Let. 3 June in   		(2003)	 IV. 358  				I poked the 3 Guineas in his Hand, & told him I would come again another Time. 1812    H. Smith  & J. Smith  6  				He pokes her head between the bars, And melts off half her nose! 1864    J. H. Burton  I. iv. 171  				When Montgomery poked out the eye of Henry II in the tilt-yard. 1866    C. Kingsley  I. ix. 215  				I cannot have you poked through with a Zeeland pike. 1939    A. Ransome  xxii. 261  				She jumped up, grabbed the message, scrumpled it up and poked it into the stove. 1994    J. Galloway  v. 61  				Cassie reached over, poking a paper tissue at the stain, knowing it wouldn't come off but doing it anyway.1802    F. O'Neill  11  				To sweep the dust, and poke the kitchen fire. 1811     38 92  				The bellows is used at once to blow and to poke the fire. 1932    W. Lewis   ii. xi. 202  				A brazier had been brought over and placed beside our host: this he poked up a little. 1980    M. Robinson  ii. 29  				Lily poked up the fire and Nona lowered the shades.society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > batting > bat			[verb (transitive)]		 > hit > hit with specific stroke1836     Oct. 360  				He was very successful in poking leg stump balls for one run. 1862    J. Pycroft  45  				See, he is longing to poke the ball to the on-side. 1872     Aug. 166  				The Eton men hit with freedom..the same bowling that the day before..they only poked or played with tameness and hesitation. 1969     20 May 13/4  				Russell, having amassed one in half an hour, poked a ball from Woolmer's excellent first over to silly midwicket. 2005     		(Nexis)	 6 Jan. (Sports section) 1  				Lurching down the pitch, Key tried to poke the ball onto the on side—a shot all risk and no value.society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > baseball > play baseball			[verb (transitive)]		 > actions of batter1880     15 May 7/1  				Kelly poked the ball to the pitcher, after having two strikes called. 1908     Aug. 229/1  				Sharky poked a bingle. 1951    in  H. Wentworth  & S. B. Flexner  		(1960)	 399/2  				Jackie Robinson poked a pitch out of the park. 1980    R. Mayer  xi. 147  				Mike McCormick, the first batter for the Bisons, poked a hit over second.the world > movement > impact > striking > strike			[verb (transitive)]		 > specific animate object1906     3 122  				I poked him on the nose. 1936    C. Odets Paradise Lost in   		(1939)	 177  				Shut up or I'll poke you one! 1959    S. J. Baker  136  				Poke, v., to hit a person with the fist. 1980    M. Bail  iii. 179  				If he took one more step I was going to poke him one. 1996    M. Burgess  		(1997)	 xxiii. 208  				He'd have loved to poke me one.  2. ?c1335    in  W. Heuser  		(1904)	 171 (MED)  				I lench, i len, on lyme i lasse, I poke, i pomple, i palle, i passe, As galliþ gome igeld.   1762    G.-A. Gallini  163  				A vulgar or improper carriage of the head, either by poking the neck, or stooping the head. 1774    J. Woodforde Diary 3 June in   		(1969)	 228  				Miss Wood is very pretty but pokes a good deal. 1776    F. Burney  		(1990)	 II. 211  				She laughs louder than a man, pokes her Head vehemently, Dresses shockingly. c1810    H. Shelley in  J. A. Symonds  		(1878)	 ii. 45  				It was not worn as a punishment, but because I poked. 1811    L.-M. Hawkins  I. xi. 185  				‘A quarter's dancing’ would be well bestowed on the young lady, as she certainly poked most terribly. 1888    F. T. Elworthy  (at cited word)  				Stan' up! don't poke like that. 1900    E. Glyn  		(1906)	 3  				They both poke their heads, and Jane turns in her toes. a1908    H. C. Hart MS Coll. Ulster Words in  M. Traynor  		(1953)	 216  				Poke,..to stoop; to go about with a stoop. He pokes more nor he usen. 1994     June 54/2  				Poke, to carry the neck stretched forward in an abnormally low, ungainly position, usually when moving.1611    R. Cotgrave   				Gibbe, a bunch, or swelling; a hulch; any thing that stands poking out. 1828    W. Carr  		(ed. 2)	  				Poke, to project, to lean forward, to bag out. 1852    H. B. Stowe  II. xx. 34  				I get up in the morning,..and see one black head poking out from under the table. 1873    T. Hardy  II. x. 229  				He used to have to leave open his chamber door every night.., and let his feet poke out upon the landing. 1905    A. T. Sheppard   iii. ii. 242  				The powdered wig-tail poked out truculently above the red collar. 1951    E. Bowen  vi. 158  				Upon his flank rebel rifles came poking out through the railings of the Green. 1980    B. Bainbridge  i. 10  				His awareness of flowers was..poor... The things either poked up out of the ground or lolled in vases. the mind > emotion > anger > irritation > irritate			[verb (transitive)]		 the mind > will > motivation > motivate			[verb (transitive)]		 > incite or instigate the world > action or operation > undertaking > beginning action or activity > begin or enter upon (an action)			[verb (transitive)]		 > stir up or rouse up > specifically a thing or conditionc1400						 (a1376)						    W. Langland  		(Trin. Cambr. R.3.14)	 		(1960)	 A.  vi. 97 (MED)  				Wraþþe..pokiþ [v.r. poukiþ] þe for pride to preise þiselue. c1400						 (a1376)						    W. Langland  		(Trin. Cambr. R.3.14)	 		(1960)	 A.  vi. 119 (MED)  				Peris þe plouȝman..pukide [v.r. powkid] hym to goode. a1450						 (?a1300)						     		(Caius)	 		(1810)	 5937 (MED)  				Kyng Richard pokyd [c1450 BL Add. pekyd; v.rr. pykked, thoghte] gret errour; Wrathe dede hym chaung colour. a1500						 (?a1430)						    J. Lydgate tr.  G. Deguileville  		(Stowe)	 16317 (MED)  				But yiff..somme sodeyne aduersyte excyte me and pooke vp-on me, I kan neuere..haue hertly Recours vnto the. 1602    B. Jonson   ii. i. sig. Cv  				You must still be poking me, against my will to  things.       View more context for this quotation 1825    J. T. Brockett   				Poked, offended, piqued. ‘Aw've poked him, sare’. 1851     7 June 388/3  				A little too fond of poking up the prejudices and peculiarities of priests and bishops. 1884     12 July 201/2  				To poke up a great conflagration in the country. 1935    ‘A. Bridge’  xiv. 177  				Separation sometimes poked people up, made them more aware of their own feelings. 1976    J. I. M. Stewart  vii. 153  				She was certainly trying to poke him up, to get some sort of response. 4. the world > space > shape > unevenness > projection or prominence > project or be prominent			[verb (intransitive)]		 the world > movement > impact > striking > striking in specific manner > strike in specific manner			[verb (intransitive)]		 > strike with pushing action > poke or prod1599    H. Porter  sig. I2v  				I will grope in the darke for him, or Ile poke with my staffe like a blinde man, to preuent a ditch. 1608    R. Armin  sig. B4v  				Now our Philosophicall Poker pokte on, and poynted to a strange shew. 1643    W. Davenant  v. i  				Swords they have all..they'll serve To poke. 1700    S. L. tr.  C. Schweitzer Relation Voy. in  tr.  C. Frick  & C. Schweitzer  327  				We found them [sc. pagodas] ruin'd..and poked again in the dark hole. 1784    F. Burney  15 Jan. 		(1842)	 II. 302  				I was really obliged to go and poke at the fire with all my might. 1867    G. MacDonald  I. vi. 128  				I saw them..poking with a long stick in the pond. 1867    A. Trollope  II. lvii. 136  				He raised his umbrella and poked angrily at the..notice. 1901    M. Hewlett Dan Costard's Tale in   79  				It [sc. a babe]..poked for the nipple and found it not. 1960    C. Day Lewis  ii. 31  				I poked at a ladybird with a grass stem. 1994    J. Kelman  330  				He held it [sc. a stick] steady and poked with it.the world > space > relative position > posture > position of specific body parts > position specific body part			[verb (transitive)]		 > head, face, or eyes1726    J. Swift  I.  ii. v. 98  				He poked his Paw into my Chamber. 1783    F. Burney  		(2012)	 V. 244  				He pokes his nose more into ones face than ever. 1797     VIII. 669/1  				For horses..who poke out their noses, a running snaffle is of excellent use. 1852    H. B. Stowe  I. viii. 100  				Marks,..poking his sharp nose and chin almost into Haley's face, gave the most earnest heed to the whole narrative. 1860    O. W. Holmes  viii. 248  				Those horrid old women poke their fingers into the salt-meat on the provision-stalls. 1920    D. H. Lawrence  ix. 214  				Madame poked two fingers through the hole in the toe of a red-and-black sock. 1977     Nov. 30/1  				‘Go and get yourself naffed, you chauvinistic, capitalistic leper,’ she rejoined sweetly, poking both index fingers into his eyes. 1984    J. Kelman  i. 23  				She poked her tongue out at him.the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > derision, ridicule, or mockery > banter or good-humoured ridicule > banter			[verb (transitive)]		1795    J. Swanwick  57  				I fancied some waggith ‘wight’ had been poking his fun at you. 1825    J. Neal  108  				He's ony pokin' fun at us, all the time, I know! 1840    T. Hood  145  				The American..in a dry way began to ‘poke his fun’ at the unfortunate traveller. 1861    T. Hughes  I. xiv. 265  				The first thing you do is to poke fun at me out of your wretched classics! 1909    ‘O. Henry’  xx. 340  				There comes in a party of these high-rollers that are always hunting up new places to eat in and poke fun at. 1964    L. Woolf  II. 115  				Hundreds of people have poked their fun at the Webbs and they were so absurd that you could not caricature them for they were always caricaturing themselves. 2004     		(Nexis)	 10 Jan.  k6  				Trinidad birthed the musical art form calypso, which pokes fun at social, political and humorous events.society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > batting > bat			[verb (intransitive)]		 > types of stroke1851    J. Pycroft  vii. 114  				Mere stopping balls and poking about in the blockhole is not cricket. 1899    E. V. Lucas  146 (The Cricket Ball Sings)  				Perish the muff and the little tin Shrewsbury, Meanly contented to potter and poke. 1927    M. A. Noble  193  				His usual aggression was missing and he poked about, mistiming and apparently being unable to make a clean stroke. 1954    E. Raymond  vi. 90  				Slow scoring because each batsman is poking cautiously at the spinning ball. 2004     		(Nexis)	 12 Apr.  				Gayle..poked at a ball spinning away from him and sent a low catch back to Batty's toes. the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual activity > engage in sexual activity with			[verb (transitive)]		 > have sexual intercourse with > specifically of a man1602    T. Dekker  sig. D3v  				Sir Vau. A Rebato must be poaked; now many women weare Rebatoes, and many that weare Rebatoes—Sir Adam. Must be poakt.   1868    tr.  Martial  27  				Saufeia,..though she was willing to be poked, would not enter the bath with the poet for decency's sake. c1890     I. vi. 184  				I felt as if I was wicked in getting into her, almost as if I was going to poke my mother. 1962    J. Braine  ix. 129  				I wanted to poke Lucy so I poked her. 1970    J. Glassco  xvii. 154  				The formula of the Hemingway hero is that he loves and therefore he dies. As one of his own hardboiled characters would say—he pokes and he croaks. 1975    N. Luard  xvi. 144  				They're far from sure she's the one this GI poked.the world > movement > impact > striking > striking in specific manner > strike in specific manner			[verb (transitive)]		 > strike with pushing action > poke or prod > make by poking1646    Sir T. Browne   iii. xx. 155  				They [sc. snails] will notwithstanding make use of their protrusions or hornes, and poke out their way as before. 1823     337/2  				Like children who poke a hole in a drum to see what it is. 1881    A. Trollope  I. xix. 230  				Poking their way up through thick bushes from a ravine, they showed their two heads. 1920    D. H. Lawrence  xxix. 479  				She was furious. She wanted to poke a hole into them both. 1972    F. Mowat  vii. 93  				We was an hour poking our way to the pushthrough what leads into Aldridges Pond. 1993     		(National Weekly ed.)	 19 Apr. 4/2  				Both of them can poke holes in the Republicans' claim that the $2.5 billion is..a political payoff for the support Democratic mayors gave Clinton's election. 7. the mind > attention and judgement > be curious, wonder			[verb (intransitive)]		 > pry1715    M. Prior  11  				Hang Homer and Virgil; their meaning to seek, A man must have pok'd into Latin and Greek. 1757     II. viii. 114  				Prying into every Corner, and poking about with Poles. a1822    P. B. Shelley Peter Bell III  vi, in   		(?1840)	 243/1  				No longer imitating Pope, In that barbarian Shakspeare poking. 1850    T. A. Trollope  xvi. 255  				In vain I poked among its obscure lanes. 1888    J. Payn  xx  				Having a lawyer to poke and pry into his accounts. 1934    D. Hammett  xvi. 114  				Whilst he was telephoning, I poked around in drawers and closets, but found nothing. 1953    K. Tennant  70  				She hadn't asked him to bring any women poking about. 1995     9 Oct. 373/2  				The committee..has announced it will not poke into this subject any further.the world > action or operation > inaction > idleness, lack of occupation or activity > be idle or unoccupied			[verb (intransitive)]		 > potter or waste time in trifling activity1811    J. Austen  II. iii. 38  				Lord bless me! how do you think I can live poking by  myself?       View more context for this quotation 1839    E. FitzGerald  		(1889)	 I. 49  				I dare say you think it very absurd that [I] should poke about here in the country, when I might be in London seeing my friends. 1876    M. M. Grant  I. viii. 234  				I should enjoy poking about a bit on Dinah's back. 1892     1 210  				This train pokes. 1925    V. Woolf  237  				He would go to Oxford and poke about in the Bodleian. 1960    L. Masters  42  				After several days poking about not too far from their camp in the Kawekas that pair managed to drop a spiker stag. 1986    G. Keillor  135  				I poked along over the Post Toasties as long as I could, then my mother sent me out to pick tomatoes. society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restraint depriving of liberty > confinement > confine			[verb (transitive)]		 > confine in a narrow space1860    C. M. Yonge  I.  x. 385  				Poking himself up in such a horrid place. 1864    C. E. L. Riddell  I. xiv. 266  				It would break her heart,..to be poked up in a town. 1881    C. M. Yonge  iii. 124  				I suppose she is not much of a lady, living poked up there. 1928    D. H. Lawrence  viii. 102  				She did not really want to sit, poked in a corner by the fire. 1996    C. Bateman  xx. 155  				Those cunts have Mary poked up in a room, and this cunt Poodle is involved.  II.  Technical uses. the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > washing > washing clothes and textile articles > wash clothes			[verb (intransitive)]		 > iron or press the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > washing > washing clothes and textile articles > wash clothes			[verb (transitive)]		 > press or iron1606     sig. E3v  				I shall turne Laundresse now, and learne to starch, And set and poke. 1614    J. Cooke Greene's Tu Quoque in  I. Reed  		(1780)	 VII. 19  				For pride, the woman that had her ruff poak'd by the devil, is but a puritan to her. 1624    J. Taylor  sig. B4  				She wrings, she folds, she pleites, she smooths, she starches, She stiffens, poakes, and sets & dry againe. 1636    W. Davenant   iii. i. sig. F2  				And then for push o' Pike, practise to poke a Ruffe.society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > action of propelling missile > discharge of firearms > fire (a gun)			[verb (transitive)]		 > aim (gun) > in specific manner society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > action of propelling missile > discharge of firearms > discharge firearms			[verb (intransitive)]		 > take aim > at moving target1898    Earl of Suffolk et al.   II. 329/2  				Do not allow him to poke his gun about and seek for his aim, or he will acquire the ‘following’ trick. 1924    E. Parker  vii. 184  				It is not difficult if you take the bird far enough out; you throw your gun up on what looks almost like a stationary mark, you pull the same instant (if you poke or dwell on the bird you are done), and he drops into the heather. 1987     Mar. 43/2  				If you are a quick and instinctive shot, a short-barrelled gun may be best... But it's also easier to stop your swing and ‘poke’. 11.  Computing. Usually in form  POKE , inflected  POKEing , etc. society > computing and information technology > hardware > use hardware			[verb (intransitive)]		 > store in memory1978    M. Waite  & M. Pardee  v. 164  				This program will pulse the speaker 100 times by POKEing into location 102. 1981    R. Norman  xxiv. 94  				POKEing into the wrong places can upset the ZX80, so that you have to switch off to clear the RAM. 1990     Feb. 17/2  				Part two covers..a good deal of PEEKing and POKEing into the world of assembler language.society > computing and information technology > hardware > use hardware			[verb (transitive)]		 > affect memory1978    M. Waite  & M. Pardee  v. 166  				This code POKEs the character C into memory location specified by X and Y. 1981    D. Inman  et al.   ii. 22  				It is often desirable to PEEK at the value in a memory location before you POKE in a new value. 1984    J. Hilton  261/1  				Having to POKE locations with numbers to produce graphics is a laborious process. 2004    Dr. K.  ii. 56  				So these car mechanic guys get high-performance cars and get the EPROM out of the engine management system and an EPROM emulator and then they poke random variables into the EPROM emulator.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022).pokev.2Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: poke n.1Etymology:  <  poke n.1 With sense  3   compare earlier poking n.2, poke-net n. at poke n.1 Compounds. Now Scottish . the mind > possession > supply > storage > store			[verb (transitive)]		 > in a receptacle > specifica1400						 (a1325)						     		(Vesp.)	 11818  				Þe parlesi has his a side, Þat dos him fast to pok [v.r. poke; a1400 Fairf. a-bate] his pride. 1483     		(BL Add. 89074)	 		(1881)	 286  				To Pok, sinciare. 1596    J. Harington  sig. E4  				Perhaps thou hast a mind to poke vp thy dish when you likest thy meate wel. 1651    J. Nicoll  		(1836)	 49  				Poking up in his pockettis such moneyis [etc.]. 1724    A. Ramsay  		(1961)	 III. 97  				Poke up your Pypes, be nae mair sene. 1880    A. M. Soutar  41  				He feint a ane o' them could pock, Tho' aft his gun went bang.the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > 			[verb (intransitive)]		 > hang or sit in specific way?a1425						 (a1325)						     		(Digby)	 		(1887)	 6394  				Many peces made þe tailour uor his robe ne ssolde poke [c1325 Calig. powȝe]. a1450    in   		(1940)	 154 (MED)  				Quidam frater tali fornicarie respondit, ‘Vere, filia,’ dixit, ‘ipse qui formauit istud sacculum hoc modo supra ventrem tuum pessimus scissor fuit, for schamely hyt poket.’the world > food and drink > hunting > fishing > type or method of fishing > 			[verb (transitive)]		 > catch fish with net1899    J. Spence  178  				Ye could ha' pokket or drawn da fill o' a skjo. 1901    T. P. Ollason  64  				Whether do you imagine I came here simply for your bloomin' amusement, or to pok sillocks,—eh? 1932    A. Horsbøl tr.  J. Jakobsen  II. 663/2  				Pok, to catch small fish, esp. coalfish, with a bag-shaped net. 1956     No. 43. 22  				The boats' noosts are situated, not far from the kraig-stanes where sillicks are draa'n, or pokk'd in Hairst.This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022).† pokev.3Origin: Apparently formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: poke n.5Etymology: Apparently  <  poke n.5 (although this is first attested later in the relevant sense: see sense  6   at that entry). North American. Obsolete . rare . 1786     IV. 256  				To order the owners of all such cows or horses, to yoke, poke or fetter them. 1828    N. Webster  (at cited word)  				To poke an ox. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2019).<  n.1c1300  n.2c1614  n.31634  n.41687  n.51690  n.61791  n.71978  v.1c1330  v.2a1400  v.31786 |