GNU Collaborative International Dictionary of English

last match results

Found 6 definitions

  1.       
    
    Cook , v. i. [Of imitative origin.] To make the noise of the cuckoo. [Obs. or R.]
    1913 Webster

    Constant cuckoos cook on every side.
    The Silkworms (1599).

    1913 Webster

  2.       
    
    Cook , v. t. [Etymol. unknown.] To throw. [Prov.Eng.]Cook me that ball.”
    Grose.

    1913 Webster
  3.       
    
    Cook , n. [AS. cōc, fr. L. cocus, coquus, coquus, fr. coquere to cook; akin to Gr. πέπτειν, Skr. pac, and to E. apricot, biscuit, concoct, dyspepsia, precocious. Cf. Pumpkin.]
    1. One whose occupation is to prepare food for the table; one who dresses or cooks meat or vegetables for eating.
      1913 Webster
    2. (Zool.) A fish, the European striped wrasse.
      1913 Webster
  4.       
    
    Cook, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Cooked ; p. pr & vb. n. Cooking.]
    1. To prepare, as food, by boiling, roasting, baking, broiling, etc.; to make suitable for eating, by the agency of fire or heat.
      1913 Webster
    2. To concoct or prepare; hence, to tamper with or alter; to garble; -- often with up; as, to cook up a story; to cook an account. [Colloq.]
      1913 Webster

      They all of them receive the same advices from abroad, and very often in the same words; but their way of cooking it is so different.
      Addison.

      1913 Webster

  5.       
    
    Cook , v. i. To prepare food for the table.
    1913 Webster
  6.       
    
    Peacock , n. [OE. pecok. Pea- in this word is from AS. peá, pāwa, peacock, fr. L. pavo, prob. of Oriental origin; cf. Gr. ταώς, ταῶς, Per. tāus, tāwus, Ar. tāwūs. See Cock the bird.]
    1. (Zool.) The male of any pheasant of the genus Pavo, of which at least two species are known, native of Southern Asia and the East Indies.
      1913 Webster

      ☞ The upper tail coverts, which are long and capable of erection, are each marked with a black spot bordered by concentric bands of brilliant blue, green, and golden colors. The common domesticated species is Pavo cristatus. The Javan peacock (Pavo muticus) is more brilliantly colored than the common species.

      1913 Webster

    2. In common usage, the species in general or collectively; a peafowl.
      1913 Webster

      Peacock butterfly (Zool.), a handsome European butterfly (Hamadryas Io) having ocelli like those of peacock. -- Peacock fish (Zool.), the European blue-striped wrasse (Labrus variegatus); -- so called on account of its brilliant colors. Called also cook wrasse and cook. -- Peacock pheasant (Zool.), any one of several species of handsome Asiatic pheasants of the genus Polyplectron. They resemble the peacock in color.

      1913 Webster

Last match results