释义 |
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024coke1 /koʊk/USA pronunciation n. [uncountable]- Chemistrythe solid carbon product obtained from coal and used chiefly as a fuel.
coke2 /koʊk/USA pronunciation n., v., coked, cok•ing. Slang.n. [uncountable] - Slang Termscocaine.
v. [~ + object (+ up)] - Slang Termsto affect with cocaine:completely coked (up) when we found him.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024coke1 (kōk),USA pronunciation n., v., coked, cok•ing. [Chem.]n. - Chemistrythe solid product resulting from the destructive distillation of coal in an oven or closed chamber or by imperfect combustion, consisting principally of carbon: used chiefly as a fuel in metallurgy to reduce metallic oxides to metals.
v.t., v.i. - Chemistryto convert into or become coke.
- late Middle English colke, coke, equivalent. to Old English col coal + -(o)ca -ock 1375–1425
coke′like′, cok′y, adj.
coke2 (kōk),USA pronunciation [Slang.]n. - Slang Termscocaine.
v.t. - Slang Termsto affect with a narcotic drug, esp. with cocaine (usually fol. by up or out).
- short for cocaine 1905–10, American.
Coke (kŏŏk),USA pronunciation n. - Biographical Sir Edward, 1552–1634, English jurist and writer on law.
Also, Cooke. Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: coke /kəʊk/ n - a solid-fuel product containing about 80 per cent of carbon produced by distillation of coal to drive off its volatile constituents: used as a fuel and in metallurgy as a reducing agent for converting metal oxides into metals
- any similar material, such as the layer formed in the cylinders of a car engine by incomplete combustion of the fuel
vb - to become or convert into coke
Etymology: 17th Century: probably a variant of C14 northern English dialect colk core, of obscure origin coke /kəʊk/ n - slang
short for cocaine
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