Nearby Words

cookable

[kook] Origin

cook

1[kook]
verb (used with object)
1.
to prepare (food) by the use of heat, as by boiling, baking, or roasting.
2.
to subject (anything) to the application of heat.
3.
Slang. to ruin; spoil.
4.
Informal. to falsify, as accounts: to cook the expense figures.
verb (used without object)
5.
to prepare food by the use of heat.
6.
(of food) to undergo cooking.
7.
Slang.
a.
to be full of activity and excitement: Las Vegas cooks around the clock.
b.
to perform, work, or do in just the right way and with energy and enthusiasm: That new drummer is really cooking tonight. Now you're cooking!
c.
to be in preparation; develop: Plans for the new factory have been cooking for several years.
d.
to take place; occur; happen: What's cooking at the club?

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Cookable is always a great word to know.
So is lollapalooza. Does it mean:
a fool or simpleton; ninny.
an extraordinary or unusual thing, person, or event; an exceptional example or instance.
noun
8.
a person who cooks: The restaurant hired a new cook.
9.
cook off, (of a shell or cartridge) to explode or fire without being triggered as a result of overheating in the chamber of the weapon.
10.
cook up, Informal.
a.
to concoct or contrive, often dishonestly: She hastily cooked up an excuse.
b.
to falsify: Someone had obviously cooked up the alibi.
11.
cook one's goose. goose (def. 11).
12.
cook the books, Slang. to manipulate the financial records of a company, organization, etc., so as to conceal profits, avoid taxes, or present a false financial report to stockholders.

Origin:
before 1000; (noun) Middle English cok(e), Old English cōc (compare Old Norse kokkr, German Koch, Dutch kok) < Latin cocus, coquus, derivative of coquere to cook; akin to Greek péptein (see peptic); (v.) late Middle English coken, derivative of the noun

cook·a·ble, adjective
cook·less, adjective
un·cook·a·ble, adjective
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2012.
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World English Dictionary
cook (kʊk)
 
vb
1.  to prepare (food) by the action of heat, as by boiling, baking, etc, or (of food) to become ready for eating through such a processRelated: culinary
2.  to subject or be subjected to the action of intense heat: the town cooked in the sun
3.  slang (tr) to alter or falsify (something, esp figures, accounts, etc): to cook the books
4.  slang (tr) to spoil or ruin (something)
5.  slang (intr) to happen (esp in the phrase what's cooking?)
6.  slang (tr) to prepare (any of several drugs) by heating
7.  slang (intr) music to play vigorously: the band was cooking
8.  informal cook someone's goose
 a.  to spoil a person's plans
 b.  to bring about someone's ruin, downfall, etc
 
n
9.  a person who prepares food for eating, esp as an occupation
 
Related: culinary
 
[Old English cōc (n), from Latin coquus a cook, from coquere to cook]
 
'cookable
 
adj

Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 10th Edition
2009 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
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Etymonline
Word Origin & History

cook
O.E. coc, from V.L. cocus "cook," from L. coquus, from coquere "to cook, prepare food, ripen, digest, turn over in the mind" from PIE base *pekw- "to cook" (cf. Oscan popina "kitchen," Skt. pakvah "cooked," Gk. peptein, Lith. kepti "to bake, roast," O.C.S. pecenu "roasted"). The noun was first; Gmc.
EXPAND
languages had no one native term for all types of cooking. The verb is first attested late 14c.; the figurative sense of "to manipulate, falsify, doctor" is from 1630s. To cook with gas is 1930s jive talk.
"There is the proverb, the more cooks the worse potage." [Gascoigne, 1575]
Related: Cooker (a type of stove, 1884); cookery (1390s); cooking (1640s).
COLLAPSE
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2010 Douglas Harper
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