coke / koʊk /

💦中学词汇焦炭可乐可卡因可口可乐

coke2 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  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.
v. 无主动词 verb

coked, cok·ing.

  1. to convert into or become coke.

coke 近义词

coke

等同于 iron

coke 的近义词 2
coke

等同于 carbon

coke 的近义词 7
coke 的反义词 1
coke

等同于 cocaine

更多coke例句

  1. 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.
  2. You won’t see commercials for other Super Bowl mainstays like Coke, Pepsi, or Hyundai either.
  3. The company plans to increase marketing investment behind Coke in the fourth quarter and into 2021, he added.
  4. Even though Coke and Pepsi are so big, they don’t truly dominate.
  5. One of the things that is helpful and why we have such a great-tasting Coke product is because of our volumes.
  6. He would shake a chilled Coke, and then spray the soda into a cold glass of milk.
  7. At his trial, he also said he was hooked on coke from the age of 8.
  8. There was a lot of weed, he snorted a ton of coke, was guzzling Bloody Marys.
  9. Tal Kallai is a gay man who does drag, playing a coke-dealing and fast-talking transgender woman in ‘Marzipan Flowers.’
  10. Michael keeps his cool until he sees piles of Petroleum Coke on the banks of the Athabasca.
  11. It is difficult to appreciate any marked resemblance between coke and the core of an apple.
  12. The girl who was drinking a coke had the glass to her lips, but apparently she wasn't sipping the liquid.
  13. The same strong, oak tables of the days of Bacon, Coke, and Jonson still stretch from end to end.
  14. Unversed in law, he was more than a match for the incomparable legal learning of Coke and for his docile bench of judges.
  15. Coke objected to having the King's evidence dismembered, 'whereby it might lose much of its grace and vigour.'