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coke
1[kohk]
noun
the 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.
verb (used with or without object)
to convert into or become coke.
Coke
2[kohk]
noun
a carbonated soft drink.
coke
3[kohk]
noun
verb (used with object)
to bring (oneself) to a specified state or point by using cocaine.
She drank and smoked and coked herself into a heart attack.
Sadly, this promising hockey player coked himself out of an NHL job.
verb phrase
coke up / out, to drug (oneself or another), especially with cocaine.
The episode starts with her haggardly coking up and then packing her kids off to school.
They coked her out, stole all her cash, and left her wandering in an unfamiliar neighborhood.
Coke
4[kook]
noun
Sir Edward, 1552–1634, English jurist and writer on law.
coke
1/ kəʊk /
noun
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
verb
to become or convert into coke
Coke
2/ kʊk, kəʊk /
noun
Sir Edward. 1552–1634, English jurist, noted for his defence of the common law against encroachment from the Crown: the Petition of Right (1628) was largely his work
Thomas William, 1st Earl of Leicester, known as Coke of Holkham. 1752–1842, English agriculturist: pioneered agricultural improvement and considerably improved productivity at his Holkham estate in Norfolk
Coke
3/ kəʊk /
noun
short for Coca-Cola
coke
4/ kəʊk /
noun
slang, short for cocaine
Other Word Forms
- cokelike adjective
- coky adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of coke1
Origin of coke2
Word History and Origins
Origin of coke1
Example Sentences
Lower-caffeine soft drinks, such Diet Coke, are not affected, and neither are tea and coffee.
It’s a different story when you look back at the New Coke fiasco of 1985.
"I went into the newsagent to buy a can of Coke and a Mars bar or something and the papers were just covered," he says.
Clairton Coke Works has been dogged by pollution concerns throughout its history and has had to pay millions of dollars in fines, penalties, and settlements in recent years.
His devotion to McDonald’s, Domino’s and Coke isn’t just a palate preference.
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