搜尋結果
stoke
- IPA[stəʊk]
英式
- add coal or other solid fuel to (a fire, furnace, boiler, etc.);encourage or incite (a strong emotion or tendency)
verb: stoke, 3rd person present: stokes, gerund or present participle: stoking, past tense: stoked, past participle: stoked
- 釋義
- 相關詞
動詞
- 1. add coal or other solid fuel to (a fire, furnace, boiler, etc.) he stoked up the barbecue
- ▪ encourage or incite (a strong emotion or tendency) his composure had the effect of stoking her anger the Chancellor was stoking up a consumer boom
- ▪ consume a large quantity of food or drink to give one energy Carol was at the coffee machine, stoking up for the day
- the cgs unit of kinematic viscosity, corresponding to a dynamic viscosity of 1 poise and a ...
Oxford Dictionary
- the cgs unit of kinematic viscosity, corresponding to a dynamic viscosity of 1 poise and a ...
Oxford American Dictionary
- excited or euphoric: when they told me I was on the team, I was stoked
Oxford American Dictionary
- excited or euphoric: when they told me I was on the team, I was stoked
Oxford Dictionary
- a city on the River Trent in Staffordshire, central England; population 248,300 (est. 2009). It ...
Oxford Dictionary
- a city on the Trent River in central England; population 248,300 (est. 2009).
Oxford American Dictionary
- a law stating that in fluorescence the wavelength of the emitted radiation is longer than that ...
Oxford American Dictionary
- a law stating that in fluorescence the wavelength of the emitted radiation is longer than that ...
Oxford Dictionary
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- IPA[stōk]
美式
- add coal or other solid fuel to (a fire, furnace, boiler, etc.): he stoked up the barbecue
Oxford American Dictionary