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单词 nuke
释义

Definition of nuke in English:

nuke

noun njuːkn(j)uk
informal
  • 1A nuclear weapon.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Syria has no links to al Qaeda, no weapons of mass destruction that could possibly harm the United States, no nukes or even a nuclear program.
    • There's lots of data available online about suitcase nukes, and nuclear weapons generally.
    • The United States is now considering developing a new generation of nuclear weapons, smart nukes which could be used to bust open bunkers and destroy weapons of mass destruction stockpiled by rogue states.
    • In 1984, I participated in a war game featuring a Cessna rigged with a tiny nuke and flown by a suicide pilot.
    • In 1958, the US began to deploy hundreds of nuclear warheads, atomic mines, artillery shells and air-dropped nukes in South Korea.
    • It's increasingly possible now for hostile states to acquire earlier generations of missile technology in the hope of some day being able to top them with nukes or biological weapons, the report warns.
    • Look, I'm no fan of how-to guides for chemical weapons or backyard nukes.
    • I assume they aren't carrying nukes - ICBMs would be the preferred delivery system in that case - so all we have are a few bombers with a few payloads of ordinary bombs.
    • The nukes will spur Japanese deployment of ABMs and may nudge Japan toward deploying offensive forces.
    • It fired no nukes or chemical weapons, and posed us no danger.
    • What will the next mayor of London say about war, occupation, new nukes, Trident, nuclear trains?
    • Tactical nukes can be launched over an unpopulated area from field artillery guns or aircraft to halt an enemy advance or in an effort to intimidate a numerically stronger enemy.
    • It's always seemed to me that that likeliest scenario is a loose nuke or a dirty bomb in a shipping container.
    • It is only a matter of time before a dirty bomb, a suitcase nuke, or a biological attack hits an American city.
    • Washington needs a strategy based on the ‘Three No's’: no loose nukes, no nascent nukes, and no new nuclear states.
    • That could lead to an Asian rim armed to the teeth with nukes and other weapons.
    • Death is death whether it comes in the form of a nuke, a bomb, a plane or an envelope.
    • Statistically, you have a much greater chance of meeting your maker as a result of a traffic accident on Sukhumvit Highway than from a car bomb or terrorist nuke.
    • In addition to the United States and Russia, only China is believed to have a large stockpile of about 120 TNWs or ‘baby nukes.’
    • I can make or disable virtually any explosive except a nuke.
    1. 1.1 A nuclear power station.
    2. 1.2 A nuclear-powered vessel.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The new enemy uses diesel-electric boats which, when running just on batteries, are much more difficult to find than those always loud Soviet nukes.
verb njuːkn(j)uk
[with object]informal
  • 1Attack or destroy with nuclear weapons.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Otherwise radical moves might result in these two nations ending up nuking each other.
    • There's nothing Christian about nuking Afghan civilians, nor spying on American students; just as there is nothing Muslim about hijacking planes and flying them into the twin towers of the World Trade Centre or the Pentagon.
    • It's not a case of ‘if you're planning to nuke us, we're going to nuke you’ it's a case of ‘if we think you're going to attack us, we're going to nuke you.’
    • If it doesn't, well he can always nuke the site from orbit and claim there was a nuclear accident.
    • You'd almost think that he wanted them to nuke California or something… perhaps its because they're democrats?
    • Though unlike the 1968 version, where we've nuked ourselves and devastated the planet, there's no actual evidence of that here.
    • There was constant hysterical invocation of an absurd counterfactual scenario: ‘What if he actually was planning to nuke us in 45 minutes?’
    • So, if the ultimate nightmare happens, and a terrorist cell gets its hands on a black-market bomb and manages to detonate it, the US proposes to nuke some random country as revenge.
    • No, we didn't actually get nuked or wiped out by ebola or nerve gas; aliens didn't land on the White House lawn.
    • You said ‘send conventional troops that he can only repel with his nuclear weapons, which will cause us to nuke him’.
    • Back on the beach, the rising moon looked really cool - it was orange and smokey and made it look like Melbourne had been nuked until it rose a bit higher and we could see the bottom.
    • We might stop an attack or two by nuking every Islamic city from Tangier to Islamabad - but, come morning, we'll have to look ourselves in the mirror.
    • We talked about it in the pub with the usual cross section of people giving off views ranging from the eminently sensible to the completely barking view of nuking them all.
    • So, why not just use man-made nuclear energy and nuke the planet today?
    • Qualified though my admiration for Lady Thatcher may be, I find it hard to believe that she'd have nuked Buenos Aires just to make a point.
    • After all, you can't nuke Bethlehem without Israel being exposed to nuclear fallout.
    • He asks Brigadier General Paul Tibbets, who dropped the atom bomb on Hiroshima, how he feels when people say ‘Let's nuke 'em’.
    • Not that I'm saying Shanghai ought to have been nuked, merely if victory was required, then it might have been necessary.
    • Why don't we try to destroy tropical cyclones by nuking them?
    • Consider the absurdity: We risk escalating a worldwide nuclear arms race to nuke a shadow terrorist enemy whose most effective military action to date was begun with box cutters.
    1. 1.1 Destroy; get rid of.
      I fertilized the lawn and nuked the weeds
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I have bought some more slug stoppa granules from the DIY store, which was all they had in the slug prevention line that didn't involve nuking the little b * ggers.
      • Most of us are in the indifferent camp thus allowing politicians, theologians and academics to nuke the world, while producing between them, not one thing of true value.
      • So I ended up even sicker, in bed, and in between sleeping, feeling sorry for myself, and nuking the jumping spider (the exciting highlight of the weekend), I did some thinking.
      • I have escaped, and with the help of your suggestively named, buxom employee, I shall stop you from nuking the U.S. gold supply!
      • He's disappointed at his lack of strength after nuking himself in a combination carnival ride / X-ray machine, but later when he dreams about his wife's fiery death, he's so angry that he turns into The Hulk.
      • Suddenly, nuking the Powerbook and going fresh with Tiger is on my mind again.
      • After Valve updated the official FAQ entry with a recommendation to try out the latest beta video drivers, I gave it a try. 67.02 are the latest Detonators, so I nuked the previous set with Driver Cleaner and reinstalled.
      • ‘I think I just nuked the computer's hard drive,’ I said, quivering.
      • You may have trouble finding a copy of this as Real nuked the original downloads a while back, but a bit of googling should find it.
      • Don't be afraid to nuke stuff that isn't interesting.
    2. 1.2 Cook or heat up (food) in a microwave oven.
      I nuked a quick burger
      Example sentencesExamples
      • While waiting for the microwave to nuke our meal, w sat down on the stools in the kitchen and began to talk.
      • The house was filled with the smells of after-school snacks being nuked as we walked in.
      • If I have been working all day, it's getting late and he is hungry (which he invariably is, all day, every day) then it seems sensible rather than sadistic to nuke him a shepherd's pie in the microwave while boiling up a pot of peas and carrots.
      • It's all very tasty, all very stylish and all very cold when you buy it frozen from Sainsbury's before nuking it in the microwave before your guests arrive.
      • We watch through our fingers as another convenience meal is nuked in the microwave, another can of fizzy pop is guzzled, another packet of crisps scoffed.
      • After several months when her comfort level increased, I progressed to putting a Hershey bar on a salad plate and nuking it into molten goodness.
      • I got home, nuked yesterday's pizza, read the paper.
      • He smiled a sexy smile and unwrapped the bowl, nuking it in the microwave for about 3 minutes.
      • Anyway, that's by the by. The point is that whilst idly nuking the noodles I noticed that the sell-by date was October 2172.
      • ‘There you are, Dolly,’ I said, doing my best to avoid tripping over a foot-winding Harry while I nuked a drop of Carnation Milk.
      • The food is cooked, not nuked, and cooking takes time. The slow pace suits the service, which is charming.
      • So I nuked a jar of Veet Warm Wax, made a little pot of rooibos tea with honey and soy milk, and set up a portable radio and portable heater in the bathroom.
      • In fact, you can even cook the rice, the chicken and the pepper and onion mixture in bulk, then quickly nuke them and throw this burrito together in minutes when the craving hits.
      • She poured milk into a glass and put it into the microwave to nuke it.
      • Unlike normal cooking, when food is nuked numerous chemical bonds are ruptured, leaving behind a trail of free radicals, ions, and other radiolytic byproducts.
      • You can nuke some for breakfast, or mix it with hot water for a quick vending-machine-free snack at work.
      • We use technology in our cooking… we nuke stuff.
      • I really need to just shut off all the machines, nuke the leftover pizza and watch ‘Blind Date’ until my brains run out my nose.
      • She pushed things around the refrigerator, looking for some convenient leftovers in a Rubbermaid container to nuke.
      • And the cook, Jay Jay, earns five buckets of stars for serving happy drinkers real good food, not idiotic nuked empanadas!

Origin

1950s: abbreviation of nuclear.

Rhymes

archduke, chibouk, duke, Farouk, fluke, kook, Luke, peruke, puke, rebuke, Seljuk, snook, souk, spruik, stook, tuque, zouk
 
 

Definition of nuke in US English:

nuke

nounn(j)ukn(y)o͞ok
informal
  • 1A nuclear weapon.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I assume they aren't carrying nukes - ICBMs would be the preferred delivery system in that case - so all we have are a few bombers with a few payloads of ordinary bombs.
    • The United States is now considering developing a new generation of nuclear weapons, smart nukes which could be used to bust open bunkers and destroy weapons of mass destruction stockpiled by rogue states.
    • There's lots of data available online about suitcase nukes, and nuclear weapons generally.
    • It's always seemed to me that that likeliest scenario is a loose nuke or a dirty bomb in a shipping container.
    • Look, I'm no fan of how-to guides for chemical weapons or backyard nukes.
    • Death is death whether it comes in the form of a nuke, a bomb, a plane or an envelope.
    • It's increasingly possible now for hostile states to acquire earlier generations of missile technology in the hope of some day being able to top them with nukes or biological weapons, the report warns.
    • It is only a matter of time before a dirty bomb, a suitcase nuke, or a biological attack hits an American city.
    • What will the next mayor of London say about war, occupation, new nukes, Trident, nuclear trains?
    • Syria has no links to al Qaeda, no weapons of mass destruction that could possibly harm the United States, no nukes or even a nuclear program.
    • That could lead to an Asian rim armed to the teeth with nukes and other weapons.
    • In addition to the United States and Russia, only China is believed to have a large stockpile of about 120 TNWs or ‘baby nukes.’
    • The nukes will spur Japanese deployment of ABMs and may nudge Japan toward deploying offensive forces.
    • In 1984, I participated in a war game featuring a Cessna rigged with a tiny nuke and flown by a suicide pilot.
    • I can make or disable virtually any explosive except a nuke.
    • Washington needs a strategy based on the ‘Three No's’: no loose nukes, no nascent nukes, and no new nuclear states.
    • It fired no nukes or chemical weapons, and posed us no danger.
    • Tactical nukes can be launched over an unpopulated area from field artillery guns or aircraft to halt an enemy advance or in an effort to intimidate a numerically stronger enemy.
    • Statistically, you have a much greater chance of meeting your maker as a result of a traffic accident on Sukhumvit Highway than from a car bomb or terrorist nuke.
    • In 1958, the US began to deploy hundreds of nuclear warheads, atomic mines, artillery shells and air-dropped nukes in South Korea.
    1. 1.1 A nuclear power station.
    2. 1.2 A nuclear-powered vessel.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The new enemy uses diesel-electric boats which, when running just on batteries, are much more difficult to find than those always loud Soviet nukes.
verbn(j)ukn(y)o͞ok
[with object]informal
  • 1Attack or destroy with nuclear weapons.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • So, why not just use man-made nuclear energy and nuke the planet today?
    • Though unlike the 1968 version, where we've nuked ourselves and devastated the planet, there's no actual evidence of that here.
    • You said ‘send conventional troops that he can only repel with his nuclear weapons, which will cause us to nuke him’.
    • It's not a case of ‘if you're planning to nuke us, we're going to nuke you’ it's a case of ‘if we think you're going to attack us, we're going to nuke you.’
    • We talked about it in the pub with the usual cross section of people giving off views ranging from the eminently sensible to the completely barking view of nuking them all.
    • Qualified though my admiration for Lady Thatcher may be, I find it hard to believe that she'd have nuked Buenos Aires just to make a point.
    • Back on the beach, the rising moon looked really cool - it was orange and smokey and made it look like Melbourne had been nuked until it rose a bit higher and we could see the bottom.
    • He asks Brigadier General Paul Tibbets, who dropped the atom bomb on Hiroshima, how he feels when people say ‘Let's nuke 'em’.
    • If it doesn't, well he can always nuke the site from orbit and claim there was a nuclear accident.
    • Otherwise radical moves might result in these two nations ending up nuking each other.
    • You'd almost think that he wanted them to nuke California or something… perhaps its because they're democrats?
    • No, we didn't actually get nuked or wiped out by ebola or nerve gas; aliens didn't land on the White House lawn.
    • Consider the absurdity: We risk escalating a worldwide nuclear arms race to nuke a shadow terrorist enemy whose most effective military action to date was begun with box cutters.
    • We might stop an attack or two by nuking every Islamic city from Tangier to Islamabad - but, come morning, we'll have to look ourselves in the mirror.
    • There was constant hysterical invocation of an absurd counterfactual scenario: ‘What if he actually was planning to nuke us in 45 minutes?’
    • There's nothing Christian about nuking Afghan civilians, nor spying on American students; just as there is nothing Muslim about hijacking planes and flying them into the twin towers of the World Trade Centre or the Pentagon.
    • Why don't we try to destroy tropical cyclones by nuking them?
    • Not that I'm saying Shanghai ought to have been nuked, merely if victory was required, then it might have been necessary.
    • After all, you can't nuke Bethlehem without Israel being exposed to nuclear fallout.
    • So, if the ultimate nightmare happens, and a terrorist cell gets its hands on a black-market bomb and manages to detonate it, the US proposes to nuke some random country as revenge.
    1. 1.1 Destroy; get rid of.
      I fertilized the lawn and nuked the weeds
      Example sentencesExamples
      • So I ended up even sicker, in bed, and in between sleeping, feeling sorry for myself, and nuking the jumping spider (the exciting highlight of the weekend), I did some thinking.
      • He's disappointed at his lack of strength after nuking himself in a combination carnival ride / X-ray machine, but later when he dreams about his wife's fiery death, he's so angry that he turns into The Hulk.
      • Don't be afraid to nuke stuff that isn't interesting.
      • After Valve updated the official FAQ entry with a recommendation to try out the latest beta video drivers, I gave it a try. 67.02 are the latest Detonators, so I nuked the previous set with Driver Cleaner and reinstalled.
      • You may have trouble finding a copy of this as Real nuked the original downloads a while back, but a bit of googling should find it.
      • I have escaped, and with the help of your suggestively named, buxom employee, I shall stop you from nuking the U.S. gold supply!
      • ‘I think I just nuked the computer's hard drive,’ I said, quivering.
      • I have bought some more slug stoppa granules from the DIY store, which was all they had in the slug prevention line that didn't involve nuking the little b * ggers.
      • Most of us are in the indifferent camp thus allowing politicians, theologians and academics to nuke the world, while producing between them, not one thing of true value.
      • Suddenly, nuking the Powerbook and going fresh with Tiger is on my mind again.
    2. 1.2 Cook or heat up (food) in a microwave oven.
      I nuked a quick burger
      Example sentencesExamples
      • While waiting for the microwave to nuke our meal, w sat down on the stools in the kitchen and began to talk.
      • ‘There you are, Dolly,’ I said, doing my best to avoid tripping over a foot-winding Harry while I nuked a drop of Carnation Milk.
      • I really need to just shut off all the machines, nuke the leftover pizza and watch ‘Blind Date’ until my brains run out my nose.
      • We watch through our fingers as another convenience meal is nuked in the microwave, another can of fizzy pop is guzzled, another packet of crisps scoffed.
      • In fact, you can even cook the rice, the chicken and the pepper and onion mixture in bulk, then quickly nuke them and throw this burrito together in minutes when the craving hits.
      • Unlike normal cooking, when food is nuked numerous chemical bonds are ruptured, leaving behind a trail of free radicals, ions, and other radiolytic byproducts.
      • You can nuke some for breakfast, or mix it with hot water for a quick vending-machine-free snack at work.
      • Anyway, that's by the by. The point is that whilst idly nuking the noodles I noticed that the sell-by date was October 2172.
      • And the cook, Jay Jay, earns five buckets of stars for serving happy drinkers real good food, not idiotic nuked empanadas!
      • If I have been working all day, it's getting late and he is hungry (which he invariably is, all day, every day) then it seems sensible rather than sadistic to nuke him a shepherd's pie in the microwave while boiling up a pot of peas and carrots.
      • We use technology in our cooking… we nuke stuff.
      • The food is cooked, not nuked, and cooking takes time. The slow pace suits the service, which is charming.
      • She poured milk into a glass and put it into the microwave to nuke it.
      • She pushed things around the refrigerator, looking for some convenient leftovers in a Rubbermaid container to nuke.
      • The house was filled with the smells of after-school snacks being nuked as we walked in.
      • It's all very tasty, all very stylish and all very cold when you buy it frozen from Sainsbury's before nuking it in the microwave before your guests arrive.
      • I got home, nuked yesterday's pizza, read the paper.
      • After several months when her comfort level increased, I progressed to putting a Hershey bar on a salad plate and nuking it into molten goodness.
      • He smiled a sexy smile and unwrapped the bowl, nuking it in the microwave for about 3 minutes.
      • So I nuked a jar of Veet Warm Wax, made a little pot of rooibos tea with honey and soy milk, and set up a portable radio and portable heater in the bathroom.

Origin

1950s: abbreviation of nuclear.

 
 
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