rocket
noun /ˈrɒkɪt/
  /ˈrɑːkɪt/
Idioms - [countable] a spacecraft in the shape of a tube that is driven by a stream of gases let out behind it when fuel is burned inside
- a space rocket
 - The rocket was launched in 2007.
 - The idea took off like a rocket (= it immediately became popular).
 
WordfinderTopics Spaceb2, Transport by airb2- astronaut
 - countdown
 - dock
 - launch
 - mission
 - orbit
 - rocket
 - satellite
 - space
 - weightless
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- space
 
- launch
 
- blast off
 - lift off
 - take off
 - …
 
- booster
 - engine
 - motor
 - …
 
 - [countable] a missile (= a weapon that travels through the air) that carries a bomb and is driven by a stream of burning gases
- a rocket attack
 - A rocket smashed into the side of the building.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- long-range
 - anti-aircraft
 - anti-tank
 - …
 
- fire
 - shoot
 
- explode
 - hit something
 - strike something
 - …
 
- attack
 - launcher
 - pod
 - …
 
 - [countable] a firework that goes high into the air and then explodes with coloured lights
 - [uncountable] (British English)
enlarge image(North American English arugula)a plant with long green leaves that have a strong taste and are eaten raw in salads 
Word Originnoun senses 1 to 3 early 17th cent.: from French roquette, from Italian rocchetto, diminutive of rocca ‘distaff (for spinning)’, with reference to its cylindrical shape. noun sense 4 late 15th cent.: from French roquette, from Italian ruchetta, diminutive of ruca, from Latin eruca ‘downy-stemmed plant’.
Idioms 
to give somebody a rocket | to get a rocket 
- (British English, informal) to speak angrily to somebody because they have done something wrong; to be spoken to angrily for this reason
 
