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coke

/kohk/US // koʊk //UK // (kəʊk) //

焦炭,可乐,可卡因,可口可乐

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : 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.
  1. 1

    coked, cok·ing.

    • : to convert into or become coke.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Drawing on his boatbuilding experience, he built a thick fiberglass body strengthened by steel tubes, later boasting that the vehicle’s shape was as distinctive as that of a Coke bottle.

  • You won’t see commercials for other Super Bowl mainstays like Coke, Pepsi, or Hyundai either.

  • The company plans to increase marketing investment behind Coke in the fourth quarter and into 2021, he added.

  • Even though Coke and Pepsi are so big, they don’t truly dominate.

  • One of the things that is helpful and why we have such a great-tasting Coke product is because of our volumes.

  • He would shake a chilled Coke, and then spray the soda into a cold glass of milk.

  • At his trial, he also said he was hooked on coke from the age of 8.

  • There was a lot of weed, he snorted a ton of coke, was guzzling Bloody Marys.

  • Tal Kallai is a gay man who does drag, playing a coke-dealing and fast-talking transgender woman in ‘Marzipan Flowers.’

  • Michael keeps his cool until he sees piles of Petroleum Coke on the banks of the Athabasca.

  • It is difficult to appreciate any marked resemblance between coke and the core of an apple.

  • The girl who was drinking a coke had the glass to her lips, but apparently she wasn't sipping the liquid.

  • The same strong, oak tables of the days of Bacon, Coke, and Jonson still stretch from end to end.

  • Unversed in law, he was more than a match for the incomparable legal learning of Coke and for his docile bench of judges.

  • Coke objected to having the King's evidence dismembered, 'whereby it might lose much of its grace and vigour.'