English-Thai Dictionary
cook
N พ่อครัว คน ทำอาหาร chef por-kua
cook
VI ทำอาหาร หุงต้ม เตรียม อาหาร tam-ar-han
cook
VI อึดอัด เพราะ อากาศ ร้อน รู้สึก ร้อนระอุ aod-ad-prow-ar-kad-ron
cook
VI เกิดขึ้น koed-kuen
cook
VT ทำอาหาร หุงต้ม เตรียม อาหาร prepare make fix tam-ar-han
cook
VT ปลอมแปลง prom-pang
cook out
PHRV ทำอาหาร ข้างนอก ทำอาหาร ด้านนอก tam-ar-han-kang-nok
cook up
PHRV ทำอาหาร อย่างเร็ว ประกอบอาหาร รวดเร็ว tam-ar-han-yang-reo
cook up
PHRV แต่งเรื่อง (คำ ไม่เป็นทางการ ประกอบ สร้างเรื่อง ขึ้น taeng-rueang
cookbook
N ตำราอาหาร tam-ra-a-han
cooker
N หม้อ หุงข้าว mor-kung-kaol
cookery
N การปรุงอาหาร kan-prung-ar-han
cookery
N รูปแบบ การปรุงอาหาร style of cooking rub-baeb-kan-prung-ar-han
cookery
N สถานที่ ปรุงอาหาร sa-tan-ti-prung-ar-han
cookhouse
N ห้องครัว kitchen hong-kua
cookie
N คุกกี้ cooky kok-ke
cookie
N บุคคล (ที่ มี ลักษณะเฉพาะ bok-kon
cooking
ADJ ที่ ใช้ ใน การปรุงอาหาร ti-chai-nai-kan-prung-ar-han
cooking
N การทำครัว การครัว การปรุงอาหาร cookery cuisine kan-tam-kua
cooking
N อาหาร ที่ เตรียม ไว้ ar-han-ti-triam wai
cooking with gas
SL ทำ ถูก ทีเดียว ถูกเผง tam-tuk-ti-diao
cooking with gas
SL ประสบผลสำเร็จ มี ความก้าวหน้า pra-sob-pon-sam-red
cookstove
N เตา หุงต้ม
cooky
N ุ คุกกี้ cokie kok-ke
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
COOK
v.t.[L.] 1. To prepare, as victuals for the table, by boiling, roasting, baking, broiling, etc. To dress, as meat or vegetables, for eating.
2. To prepare for any purpose.
3. To throw. [Obs. or local. ]
COOK
v.i.To make the noise of the cuckoo.
COOK
n.[L.] One whose occupation is to prepare victuals for the table; a man or woman who dresses meat or vegetables for eating.
COOKED
ppr. Prepared for the table.
COOKERY
n.The art or the practice of dressing and preparing victuals for the table.
COOKING
ppr. Preparing victuals for the table.
COOKMAID
n.[cook and maid. ] A female servant or maid who dresses provisions.
COOKROOM
n.[cook and room. ] A room for cookery; a kitchen. On board of ships, a galley or caboose.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
COOK
Cook, v. i. Etym: [Of imitative origin. ]
Defn: To make the noise of the cuckoo. [Obs. or R.] Constant cuckoos cook on every side. The Silkworms (1599 ).
COOK
Cook, v. t. Etym: [Etymol. unknown. ]
Defn: To throw. [Prov. Eng. ] "Cook me that ball. " Grose.
COOK
Cook, n. Etym: [AS. coc, fr. l. cocus, coquus, coquus, fr. coquere to cook; akin to Gr. 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.
2. (Zoöl.)
Defn: A fish, the European striped wrasse.
COOK
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.
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. ] 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.
COOK
COOK Cook, v. i.
Defn: To prepare food for the table.
COOKBOOK
COOKBOOK Cook "book `, n.
Defn: A book of directions and receipts for cooking; a cookery book. [U.S.] "Just How ": a key to the cookbooks. Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney.
COOKEE
COOKEE Cook *ee ", n.
Defn: A female cook. [R.]
COOKERY
COOKERY Cook "er *y, n.
1. The art or process of preparing food for the table, by dressing, compounding, and the application of heat.
2. A delicacy; a dainty. [Obs. ] R. North.
COOKEY; COOKIE
COOKEY; COOKIE Cook "ey, Cook "ie, n.
Defn: See Cooky.
COOKMAID
COOKMAID Cook "maid `, n.
Defn: A female servant or maid who dresses provisions and assists the cook.
COOKROOM
COOKROOM Cook "room `, n.
Defn: A room for cookery; a kitchen; the galley or caboose of a ship. Sir W. Raleigh.
COOKSHOP
COOKSHOP Cook `shop, n.
Defn: An eating house. "A subterranean cookshop. " Macaulay.
COOKY
Cook "y, n.; pl. Cookies. Etym: [Cf. D. koek cake, dim. koekje; akin to G. kuchen, E. cake; or cf. OE. coket, prob. , a sort of cake, and prob. of French origin. ]
Defn: A small, flat, sweetened cake of various kinds.
New American Oxford Dictionary
cook
cook |ko͝ok kʊk | ▶verb 1 [ with obj. ] prepare (food, a dish, or a meal ) by combining and heating the ingredients in various ways: shall I cook dinner tonight? | [ no obj. ] : I told you I could cook | (as adj. cooked ) : a cooked breakfast. • [ no obj. ] (of food ) be heated so that the condition required for eating is reached: while the rice is cooking, add the saffron to the stock. • (cook something down ) heat food and cause it to thicken and reduce in volume: cooking down the chutney can take up to 45 minutes. • (be cooking ) informal be happening or planned: what's cooking on the alternative fuels front? 2 [ with obj. ] informal alter dishonestly; falsify: a narcotics team who cooked the evidence. • (be cooked ) be in an inescapably bad situation: if I can't talk to him, I'm cooked. 3 [ no obj. ] informal perform or proceed vigorously or well: the band used to get up on the bandstand and really cook. ▶noun a person who prepares and cooks food, esp. as a job or in a specified way: a short order cook | I'm a good cook. PHRASES cook the books informal alter facts or figures dishonestly or illegally. cook someone's goose informal cause someone's downfall: I've got enough on you to cook your goose. too many cooks spoil the broth proverb if too many people are involved in a task, it will not be done well. PHRASAL VERBS cook something up concoct a story, excuse, or plan, esp. an ingenious or devious one. DERIVATIVES cook a ble adjective ORIGIN Old English cōc (noun ), from popular Latin cocus, from Latin coquus.
Cook, James
Cook, James |ko͝ok kʊk | (1728 –79 ), English explorer; known as Captain Cook. On his first expedition to the Pacific 1768 –71, he charted the coasts of New Zealand and New Guinea and explored the east coast of Australia, claiming it for Britain. He made two more voyages to the Pacific before being killed in a skirmish with the Hawaiians.
Cook, Mount
Cook, Mount the highest peak in New Zealand, in the Southern Alps on South Island, that rises to a height of 12,349 feet (3,764 m ). It is named after Captain James Cook. Official name Aoraki /Mount Cook.
Cook, Peter
Cook |kʊk | (1937 –95 ), English comedian and actor; full name Peter Edward Cook. A writer and performer of the revue Beyond the Fringe (1959 –64 ), he is remembered also for his television partnership with Dudley Moore. He had a long association with the satirical magazine Private Eye.
Cook, Thomas
Cook, Thomas |kʊk ko͝ok | (1808 –92 ), English founder of the travel agency Thomas Cook. In 1841, he organized the first publicly advertised excursion train in England; the success of this venture led him to organize further excursions both in Britain and abroad, laying the foundations for the tourist and travel-agent industry.
cookbook
cook book |ˈko͝okˌbo͝ok ˈkʊkˌbʊk | ▶noun a book containing recipes and other information about the preparation and cooking of food.
cook-chill
cook-chill ▶adjective [ attrib. ] Brit. relating to or denoting a procedure whereby food is cooked and refrigerated by the manufacturer ready for reheating by the consumer: cook-chill food | cook-chill processes.
Cook County
Cook Coun ty |ko͝ok ˌkʊk ˈkaʊnti | a county in northeastern Illinois that includes Chicago and most of its closer suburbs; pop. 5,294,664 (est. 2008 ).
Cooke, Alistair
Cooke, Alistair |ko͝ok kʊk | (1908 –2004 ), British journalist and broadcaster; in the US from 1937; full name Alfred Alistair Cooke. His BBC broadcasts of “Letter from America ” began in 1946 and continued until shortly before his death. He hosted Omnibus on CBS 1952 –60 and Masterpiece Theatre on PBS 1971 –92.
Cooke, Jay
Cooke, Jay |ko͝ok kʊk | (1821 –1905 ), US financier. He was the founder of Jay Cooke and Company, a leading Philadelphia bank, in 1861; his sale of bonds helped to finance the Civil War, and his financing of western railroads precipitated the Panic of 1873.
Cooke, Sir William Fothergill
Cooke |kʊk | (1806 –79 ), English inventor. With Sir Charles Wheatstone he invented the electric telegraph alarm.
cooker
cook er |ˈko͝okər ˈkʊkər | ▶noun chiefly Brit. an appliance used for cooking food.
cookery
cook er y |ˈko͝okərē ˈkʊk (ə )ri | ▶noun ( pl. cookeries ) 1 the practice or skill of preparing and cooking food. 2 a place in which food is cooked; a kitchen.
cookery book
cook |ery book ▶noun chiefly Brit. a book containing recipes and other information about the preparation and cooking of food.
cookhouse
cook house |ˈko͝okˌhous ˈkʊkˌhaʊs | ▶noun 1 a kitchen or dining hall in a military camp. 2 an outdoor kitchen in a warm country.
cookie
cook ie |ˈko͝okē ˈkʊki | ▶noun ( pl. cookies ) 1 a small sweet cake, typically round, flat, and crisp. 2 informal a person of a specified kind: a tough cookie with one eye on her bank account. 3 Computing a packet of data sent by an Internet server to a browser, which is returned by the browser each time it subsequently accesses the same server, used to identify the user or track their access to the server. PHRASES that's the way the cookie crumbles informal that's how things turn out (often used of an undesirable but unalterable situation ).ORIGIN early 18th cent.: from Dutch koekje ‘little cake, ’ diminutive of koek.
cookie cutter
cook ie cut ter |ˈkʊki ˈkədər | ▶noun a device with sharp edges for cutting cookie dough into a particular shape. • [ as modifier ] denoting something mass-produced or lacking any distinguishing characteristics: a cookie-cutter apartment in a high-rise building.
cookie jar
cook ie jar |ˈkʊki ʤɑr | ▶noun a jar to hold cookies. PHRASES with one's hand in the cookie jar engaged in surreptitious theft from one's employer: they got caught with their hands in the cookie jar .
cookie sheet
cook ie sheet |ˈkʊki ʃit | ▶noun a flat metal tray on which cookies are baked.
cooking
cook ing |ˈko͝okiNG kʊkɪŋ | ▶noun the process of preparing food by heating it: frozen food must be fully defrosted before cooking. • food that has been prepared in a particular way: authentic Italian cooking. • [ as modifier ] suitable for or used in cooking: cooking oil.
Cook Inlet
Cook In let an inlet of the Gulf of Alaska, west of the Kenai Peninsula in southern Alaska. Anchorage lies at its northern end.
Cook Islands
Cook Is lands a group of 15 islands in the southwestern Pacific Ocean between Tonga and French Polynesia that have the status of a self-governing territory in free association with New Zealand; pop. 11,900 (est. 2009 ); capital, Avarua, on Rarotonga. ORIGIN named after Captain J. Cook (see Cook, James ), who visited them in 1773.
cookout
cook out |ˈko͝okˌout ˈkʊkˌaʊt | ▶noun a party or gathering where a meal is cooked and eaten outdoors.
cookshop
cook |shop |ˈkʊkʃɒp | ▶noun 1 archaic a shop selling cooked food. 2 Brit. a shop selling cooking equipment.
Cookson, Dame Catherine
Cook son, Dame Catherine |ˈko͝oksən ˈkʊksən | (1906 –98 ), English writer; full name Dame Catherine Anne Cookson. A prolific author of light romantic fiction, she is best known for the Mary Ann series (1956 –67 ), the Mallen trilogy (1973 –74 ), and the Tilly Trotter series (1980 –82 ).
Cook's tour
Cook's tour ▶noun informal a rapid tour of many places: figurative : he then took me on a Cook's tour of his neuroscientific theories. ORIGIN early 20th cent.: from the name of the travel agent Thomas Cook (see Cook, Thomas ).
Cook Strait
Cook Strait |kʊkˈstreɪt | the strait that separates North and South islands of New Zealand. It was named after Captain James Cook, who visited it in 1770.
cooktop
cook top |ˈko͝okˌtäp ˈkʊktɑp | ▶noun a cooking unit, usually with hot plates or burners, built into or fixed on the top of a cabinet or other surface.
cookware
cook ware |ˈko͝okˌwe (ə )r ˈkʊkˌwɛ (ə )r | ▶noun pots, pans, or dishes for cooking food: cast-iron cookware.
Oxford Dictionary
cook
cook |kʊk | ▶verb 1 [ with obj. ] prepare (food, a dish, or a meal ) by mixing, combining, and heating the ingredients: shall I cook dinner tonight? | [ with two objs ] : she cooked me eggs and bacon | (as adj. cooked ) : a cooked breakfast. • [ no obj. ] (of food ) be heated so that the state required for eating is reached: while the rice is cooking, add the saffron to the stock. • (cook something down ) heat food and cause it to thicken and reduce in volume: cooking down the chutney can take up to 45 minutes. 2 [ with obj. ] informal alter dishonestly; falsify: a narcotics team who cooked the evidence. • (be cooked ) be in an inescapably bad situation: if I can't talk to him I'm cooked. 3 [ no obj. ] (be cooking ) informal be happening or planned: what's cooking on the alternative fuels front? 4 [ no obj. ] N. Amer. informal perform or proceed vigorously or very well: the band used to get up on the bandstand and really cook. ▶noun a person who prepares and cooks food, especially as a job or in a specified way: Susan was a school cook | I'm a good cook. PHRASES cook the books informal alter facts or figures dishonestly or illegally. cook someone's goose informal spoil someone's plans; cause someone's downfall. too many cooks spoil the broth proverb if too many people are involved in a task or activity, it will not be done well. PHRASAL VERBS cook something up concoct a clever or devious story, excuse, or plan: I've had plenty of time to cook up an outlandish conspiracy theory. DERIVATIVES cookable adjective ORIGIN Old English cōc (noun ), from popular Latin cocus, from Latin coquus.
Cook, Captain James
Cook |kʊk | (1728 –79 ), English explorer. On his first expedition to the Pacific (1768 –71 ), he charted the coasts of New Zealand and New Guinea as well as exploring the east coast of Australia and claiming it for Britain. He made two more voyages to the Pacific before being killed in a skirmish with indigenous people in Hawaii.
Cook, Mount
Cook, Mount the highest peak in New Zealand, in the Southern Alps in the South Island, rising to a height of 3,764 m (12,349 ft ). It is named after Captain James Cook. Official name Aoraki /Mount Cook.
Cook, Peter
Cook |kʊk | (1937 –95 ), English comedian and actor; full name Peter Edward Cook. A writer and performer of the revue Beyond the Fringe (1959 –64 ), he is remembered also for his television partnership with Dudley Moore. He had a long association with the satirical magazine Private Eye.
Cook, Thomas
Cook |kʊk | (1808 –92 ), English founder of the travel firm Thomas Cook. In 1841 he organized the first publicly advertised excursion train in England; the success of this venture led him to organize further excursions both in Britain and abroad, laying the foundations for the tourist and travel-agent industry.
cookbook
cook |book |ˈkʊkbʊk | ▶noun a cookery book.
cook-chill
cook-chill ▶adjective [ attrib. ] Brit. relating to or denoting a procedure whereby food is cooked and refrigerated by the manufacturer ready for reheating by the consumer: cook-chill food | cook-chill processes.
Cook County
Cook Coun ty |ko͝ok ˌkʊk ˈkaʊnti | a county in northeastern Illinois that includes Chicago and most of its closer suburbs; pop. 5,294,664 (est. 2008 ).
Cooke, Alistair
Cooke, Alistair |ko͝ok kʊk | (1908 –2004 ), British journalist and broadcaster; in the US from 1937; full name Alfred Alistair Cooke. His BBC broadcasts of “Letter from America ” began in 1946 and continued until shortly before his death. He hosted Omnibus on CBS 1952 –60 and Masterpiece Theatre on PBS 1971 –92.
Cooke, Jay
Cooke, Jay |ko͝ok kʊk | (1821 –1905 ), US financier. He was the founder of Jay Cooke and Company, a leading Philadelphia bank, in 1861; his sale of bonds helped to finance the Civil War, and his financing of western railroads precipitated the Panic of 1873.
Cooke, Sir William Fothergill
Cooke |kʊk | (1806 –79 ), English inventor. With Sir Charles Wheatstone he invented the electric telegraph alarm.
cooker
cook ¦er |ˈkʊkə | ▶noun Brit. 1 an appliance used for cooking food, typically consisting of an oven, hob, and grill and powered by gas or electricity. 2 informal an apple or other fruit that is more suitable for cooking than for eating raw.
cookery
cook |ery |ˈkʊk (ə )ri | ▶noun ( pl. cookeries ) 1 [ mass noun ] the practice or skill of preparing and cooking food. 2 N. Amer. a place in which food is cooked; a kitchen.
cookery book
cook |ery book ▶noun chiefly Brit. a book containing recipes and other information about the preparation and cooking of food.
cookhouse
cook |house |ˈkʊkhaʊs | ▶noun 1 a kitchen or dining hall in a military camp. 2 an outdoor kitchen in a warm country.
cookie
cookie |ˈkʊki | ▶noun ( pl. cookies ) 1 N. Amer. a sweet biscuit. 2 [ with adj. ] informal a person of a specified kind: she's a tough cookie. 3 Scottish a plain bun. 4 Computing a packet of data sent by an Internet server to a browser, which is returned by the browser each time it subsequently accesses the same server, used to identify the user or track their access to the server. PHRASES that's the way the cookie crumbles informal, chiefly N. Amer. that's the way the situation is, and it must be accepted, however undesirable. ORIGIN early 18th cent.: from Dutch koekje ‘little cake ’, diminutive of koek.
cookie cutter
cookie cut ¦ter ▶noun N. Amer. a device with sharp edges for cutting biscuit dough into a particular shape. • [ as modifier ] denoting something mass-produced or lacking any distinguishing characteristics: a cookie-cutter apartment in a high-rise building.
cookie jar
cookie jar ▶noun N. Amer. a jar for biscuits or small cakes. PHRASES with one's hand in the cookie jar engaged in surreptitious theft from one's employer: they got caught with their hands in the cookie jar.
cookie sheet
cookie sheet ▶noun N. Amer. a flat metal tray on which biscuits or cakes may be cooked.
cooking
cook |ing |ˈkʊkɪŋ | ▶noun [ mass noun ] the process of preparing food by heating it. • food that has been prepared in a particular way: authentic Italian cooking. • [ as modifier ] suitable for or used in cooking: cooking chocolate.
Cook Inlet
Cook In let an inlet of the Gulf of Alaska, west of the Kenai Peninsula in southern Alaska. Anchorage lies at its northern end.
Cook Islands
Cook Islands a group of fifteen islands in the SW Pacific Ocean between Tonga and French Polynesia, which have the status of a self-governing territory in free association with New Zealand; pop. 11,900 (est. 2009 ); languages, English (official ), Rarotongan (a Polynesian language ); capital, Avarua, on Rarotonga. ORIGIN named after Captain James Cook (see Cook, Captain James ), who visited them in 1773.
cookout
cook |out |ˈkʊkaʊt | ▶noun N. Amer. a party or gathering where a meal is cooked and eaten outdoors.
cookshop
cook |shop |ˈkʊkʃɒp | ▶noun 1 archaic a shop selling cooked food. 2 Brit. a shop selling cooking equipment.
Cookson, Dame Catherine
Cookson, Dame Catherine |ˈkʊks (ə )n | (1906 –98 ), English writer, a prolific author of light romantic fiction; full name Dame Catherine Anne Cookson.
Cook's tour
Cook's tour |kʊksˈtʊə | ▶noun informal a rapid tour of many places: let me give you the Cook's tour of the works here | figurative : he then took me on a Cook's tour of his scientific theories. ORIGIN early 20th cent.: from the name of the travel agent Thomas Cook (see Cook, Thomas ).
Cook Strait
Cook Strait |kʊkˈstreɪt | the strait separating the South Island and the North Island of New Zealand. It was named after Captain James Cook, who visited it in 1770.
cooktop
cook |top |ˈkʊktɒp | ▶noun N. Amer. a cooking unit, usually with hot plates or burners, built into or fixed on the top of a cabinet or other surface.
cookware
cook |ware |ˈkʊkwɛː | ▶noun [ mass noun ] pots, pans, or dishes in which food can be cooked: cast-iron cookware.
American Oxford Thesaurus
cook
cook verb 1 Scott cooked dinner: prepare, make, put together; informal fix, rustle up. 2 informal he's been cooking the books: falsify, alter, doctor, tamper with, interfere with, massage, manipulate, fiddle. 3 informal (cookin' /cooking ) we just stopped by to see what's cookin': happening, going on, taking place, occurring; informal going down. ▶noun chef, food preparer, short-order cook, pastry chef; chef de cuisine, sous-chef, cordon bleu cook; informal cookie. PHRASES cook up informal he cooked up an alibi so ludicrous that even his own attorney laughed: concoct, devise, contrive, fabricate, trump up, hatch, plot, plan, invent, make up, think up, dream up.
cooking
cooking noun authentic Italian cooking: cuisine, cookery, baking; food preparation; food. WORD LINKS culinary relating to cooking Word Links sections supply words that are related to the headword but do not normally appear in a thesaurus because they are not actual synonyms.
Oxford Thesaurus
cook
cook verb 1 I decided to cook a romantic dinner: prepare, make, get, put together; bake; informal fix, knock up, rustle up. 2 informal he was accused of cooking the books: falsify, alter, doctor, tamper with, interfere with, massage, manipulate, rig, misrepresent; forge; Brit. informal fiddle. 3 informal hey there, Rob, what's cooking? happen, go on, occur, take place; N. Amer. informal go down. PHRASES cook something up he'd already cooked up a little plan to entice Jessica to go with him: concoct, devise, put together, create, contrive, fabricate, prepare, trump up, hatch, brew, plot, plan, scheme; invent, make up, think up, dream up.
cooking
cooking noun authentic Italian cooking: cuisine, cookery, baking; food. WORD LINKS cooking culinary relating to cooking Word Links sections supply words that are related to the headword but do not normally appear in a thesaurus because they are not actual synonyms.
Duden Dictionary
Cook
Cook Eigenname |kʊk |britischer Entdecker
Cookie
Coo kie Substantiv, maskulin oder Substantiv, Neutrum , der oder das |ˈkʊki |der oder das Cookie; Genitiv: des Cookies, Plural: die Cookies 1 Keks, Plätzchen englisch cookie 2 nach dem Programm »fortune cookie «, das per Zufall einen Spruch, ein Zitat o. Ä. erzeugt und in einigen Computersystemen bei der Benutzeranmeldung automatisch ausgeführt wird; englisch fortune cookie = Glückskeks EDV Datei, mit der der Benutzer einer Website identifiziert werden kann
Cookinseln
Cook in seln Eigenname , die Plural Inselgruppe im Südwestpazifik
French Dictionary
cookie
cookie FORME FAUTIVE Anglicisme pour témoin (informatique ).
Spanish Dictionary
cookie
cookie nombre femenino 1 inform Archivo pequeño que envía un servidor web al disco duro del internauta que lo visita con información sobre sus preferencias y pautas de navegación :un estudio descubre que hay empresas que están utilizando cookies imborrables .2 nombre femenino Galleta redonda y gruesa, especialmente la que contiene trozos de chocolate :me apetece una bola de helado de vainilla con cookies .ETIMOLOGÍA Préstamo del inglés cookie .Se pronuncia 'cúqui '.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
Cook
Cook /kʊk /名詞 1 (キャプテン )クック 〘(Captain ) James ~, 1728 --79; 英国の航海探検家 〙.2 (トマス )クック 〘Thomas ~ (& Son ); 世界初のパック旅行を組んだ英国の旅行会社 〙▸ a Cook 's tour 駆け足旅行 3 クック山 〘Mount ~; ニュージーランドの最高峰 〙.
cook
cook /kʊk /〖原義は 名詞 〗(名 )cooker, (名 形 )cooking 動詞 ~s /-s /; ~ed /-t /; ~ing (→分詞 cooked )他動詞 1 a. 〈人が 〉 (加熱して )〈食事 料理 〉を作る (!加熱して調理する場合を総称してcookを用いる; →bake , boil 1 類義 ) ▸ cook breakfast [a meal ]朝食 [食事 ]を作る ▸ cook a Chinese meal for dinner 夕食に中華料理を作る ⦅作文のポイント ⦆サラダを作る .× cook salad ○ fix [make, toss ] salad ❢加熱しないサラダなどは ⦅主に米 ⦆fix, makeなどを, また手の込んだ料理にはprepareを用いる. soupにはcookよりもmakeの方が多く用いられる .b. 〖cook A B /B for A 〗〈人が 〉A 〈人 〉にB 〈食事 〉を (加熱して )作る (!食事を強調する時にはcook A B, 人を強調する時はcook B for A; →give 他動詞 1 語法 (5 )(a )) ▸ My father cooked me my favorite spaghetti .父は私の大好きなスパゲティを作ってくれた ▸ She cooked breakfast for her husband .彼女は朝食を夫のために作った (!Aを主語にした受け身文A is cooked … は通例用いない ) c. 〖cook A (C )〗〈人が 〉 (加熱して )(C 〈状態 〉で [になるまで ])A 〈食材 〉を 料理する (!Cは 形容詞 副詞 分詞 など ) ▸ Eggs should be thoroughly cooked .卵はしっかりと加熱しなくてはいけません 表現 いろいろなcook 加熱方法や食材により日本語では 「炊く 」「煮る 」「焼く 」「炒める 」などになる ▸ ~ pasta in boiling salted water パスタを塩ゆでする ▸ ~ onion until translucent 透き通るまでタマネギを炒める ▸ ~ rice ご飯を炊く ▸ ~ pork in a frying pan フライパンで豚肉を焼く 2 ⦅くだけて ⦆(わざと )〈事実 数値など 〉をいじくる , ごまかす , でっち上げる ▸ cook the books 帳簿をごまかす 3 ⦅俗 ⦆〈機会 〉をだめにする .4 ⦅米 くだけて ⦆…に成功する .自動詞 1 〖~ (+副詞 )〗〈食材が 〉(加熱 )調理される (!副詞 は様態の表現 ) ▸ While the pasta is cooking , slice the onions .⦅レシピ ⦆パスタをゆでている間にタマネギを薄切りにします ▸ Potatoes cook slowly .ジャガイモは煮えがおそい ▸ cook well よく煮える 2 〈人 調理器具などが 〉【人のために 】(加熱して )料理を作る , 調理する «for » ; コックとして働く ▸ I don't have enough time to cook for myself .私は自炊している時間がない ▸ Add the garlic and cook gently for 3 minutes .⦅レシピ ⦆ニンニクを加えて3分間とろ火で加熱してください 3 ⦅くだけて ⦆〖be ~ing 〗〈計画などが 〉企まれている .4 ⦅米 くだけて ⦆うまくいく , 成功する .be c ò oking (with g á s )⦅米話 ⦆うまくいく (↑自動詞 4 )▸ Now you're cooking (with gas ).立派にやってるね c ò ok ó ut 外で調理する, 野外料理 (パーティ )をする .c ò ok A ú p [ú p A ]1 ⦅くだけて ⦆A 〈言い訳 話 計画など 〉をでっち上げる ; A 〈計画 〉をひそかに作る (⦅よりかたく ⦆concoct ).2 A 〈食事 〉をさっと作る ; たくさん作る .Wh à t's c ó oking?⦅くだけて やや古 ⦆何が起こっているのか, どうなってるの .名詞 複 ~s /-s /C コック, 調理師 , 料理を作る人 (!(1 )職業としてのコックとは限らない. (2 )家で雇うコックは通例C -で無冠詞. (3 )╳cookerとしない; →chef ) ▸ work as a cook at a hotel ホテルで料理人として働く ▸ My wife is a good [terrible ] cook .私の妻は料理上手 [がへた ]だ ▸ Too many cooks spoil the broth .⦅ことわざ ⦆料理人が多すぎると肉汁ができそこなう ; 「船頭多くして船山に登る 」 (!指図する人が多過ぎるとうまく行かない ) ▸ be chief cook and bottle washer ⦅おどけて ⦆(シェフと皿洗いを兼ねるように )さまざまな仕事を引き受ける
cookbook
c ó ok b ò ok 名詞 C ⦅米 ⦆料理の本 (⦅英 ⦆cookery book ).
cooked
cooked /-t /形容詞 〖名詞 の前で 〗加熱 (調理 )された 〈食物 〉(↔raw )▸ leftover cooked rice 残りご飯 ▸ hard- cooked eggs 固ゆでの卵
cooker
cook er /kʊ́kə r /→cook 名詞 複 ~s /-z /C ⦅英 ⦆1 料理用なべ [かま ]; レンジ , コンロ (⦅主に米 ⦆stove 1, range )▸ a gas [microwave ] cooker ガス [電子 ]レンジ 2 〖通例 ~s 〗(生で食べるのではなく )料理に適した果物 (!特にリンゴをさす ) .
cookery
cook er y /kʊ́k (ə )ri /名詞 U 1 ⦅英 ⦆料理法 (⦅米 ⦆cooking )▸ a cookery school 料理学校 2 ⦅米 ⦆調理場 .~́ b ò ok ⦅英 ⦆=cookbook .
cookhouse
c ó ok h ò use 名詞 C (野外 )炊事場 〘キャンプ場などにある 〙; (船の )調理室 (galley ).
cookie
cook ie /kʊ́ki /〖<オランダ; 「小さいケーキ 」〗名詞 複 -ies /-z /C 1 ⦅主に米 ⦆クッキー (⦅英 ⦆biscuit )▸ bake cookies for Christmas クリスマスのためにクッキーを焼く ▸ chocolate-chip cookies チョコレートチップクッキー ▸ a bag [box ] of her home-made cookies 彼女の手作りクッキー1袋 [箱 ]2 ⦅くだけて ⦆〖特定の 形容詞 と共に 〗やつ , 男 ▸ a tough cookie 食えないやつ 3 ⦅米俗 古 ⦆〖女性への呼びかけで 〗かわいこちゃん .4 ⦅スコット ⦆小型の丸いケーキ , 菓子パン (bun ).5 〘コンピュ 〙クッキー 〘サーバからウェブブラウザに送られる情報ファイル 〙.That's the w á y the c ò okie cr ú mbles. ⦅主に米 くだけて ⦆(不運な出来事に接して )世の中ってそんなもんだ .t ò ss [sn à p ] one's c ó okies ⦅米俗 ⦆(げろを )吐く, 戻す .~́ c ù tter (!⦅米 ⦆) 1 クッキーの抜き型 .2 ⦅非難して ⦆紋切り型 .~́ g ù n クッキーガン 〘クッキーの生地を入れ絞り出す道具 〙.~́ j à r クッキー入れ .~́ pr è ss クッキープレス 〘クッキー生地をいろいろな形に押し出す機械 〙.~́ p ù sher (男性の )弱虫, 女々 (めめ )しいやつ ; おべっか使い ; キャリアの役人, 世事にたけた外交官 .~́ sh è et ⦅米 ⦆(クッキーなどを焼く )天板 (baking sheet ).
cooking
cook ing /kʊ́kɪŋ /→cook 名詞 U 1 料理をすること ▸ Are you good at cooking [a good cook ]?料理は得意ですか ▸ do one's own cooking 自炊する ▸ during cooking 料理中に ▸ She did all the cooking .料理はすべて彼女がやった 2 料理 , 料理法 ▸ home [Korean ] cooking 家庭 [韓国 ]料理 ▸ Susan's cooking スーザンの手料理 形容詞 比較なし 〖名詞 の前で 〗料理 (用 )の , 料理に適した ▸ cooking time 料理にかかる時間 ▸ cooking utensils 調理器具 ▸ cooking oil サラダ油, 食用油 ▸ a cooking show (テレビの )料理番組 ~́ à pple ⦅英 ⦆(調理しないと食べられない )料理用リンゴ (→eating apple ).~́ g à s ⦅米 ⦆家庭用液化ブタンガス (ボンベ )(⦅英 ⦆Calor gas ).~́ sch ò ol 料理学校 .
cookout
c ó ok ò ut 名詞 C ⦅米 くだけて ⦆野外料理, 野外パーティ .
cookware
c ó ok w à re 名詞 U 〖集合的に 〗料理用具, 調理器具 .
cooky
cook y /kʊ́ki /名詞 複 -ies ⦅まれ ⦆=cookie .