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单词 stoke
释义

Definition of stoke in English:

stoke

verb stəʊkstoʊk
[with object]
  • 1Add coal or other solid fuel to (a fire, furnace, boiler, etc.)

    给(火,炉子,锅炉)加煤(或其他固体燃料)

    he stoked up the barbecue
    Example sentencesExamples
    • After stoking the fire, he circles the room again, searching for cracks and crevices where wind might be seeping in, and the life-sustaining warmth of the fire is escaping.
    • On a dank autumnal afternoon in Glasgow's west end the light is liquid, a day to draw the blinds and stoke the fire.
    • Although feathers do a fine job of insulating a small bird's body from cold, food is the fuel that stokes its inner fires, keeping its metabolism generating crucial heat and energy.
    • On the first deck, the level at which you board, there is a quite large opening down to the engine room two levels below, so that you can see the engines and the firemen stoking the boilers.
    • It's very smoky and mysterious and we all sit in silence while a very serene Lap lady in traditional blue and red embroidered costume moves around the room, stoking the fire and watching us carefully.
    • The furnaces that fed them fizzled out long ago, the coal that stoked the fires lies unexcavated in flooded mines.
    • Around the little valley, other families are stirring, stoking their fires, planning chores, coming to grips with another day in the wilds of Montana.
    • The other is fat-bellied, slack muscled and poor yet shovels in expensive long-term poisons as though stoking the boiler of a battleship.
    • But the caretaker who has to stoke six boilers each day, cart 12 puds of fuel, carry water on her shoulders so that staff can wash their hands, she receives 12 rubles, has no work clothes, no day off, and no holidays.
    • She strode out of the tent and watched him stoking the fire for a few moments, there was a blustery wind making it stutter and struggle.
    • In the evenings, my mother read to us, and we knitted socks and sweaters for my dad in the army, stoked the fire and listened to the radio, mainly to Children's Hour, and the news, of course.
    • I remember my father going out to stoke the furnaces to make sure they didn't go out.
    • The card showed a 19th century photograph of a young boy, no more than eight, stoking the furnace in a grimy workshop, surrounded by men beavering away along a production line.
    • We lit a bunch of candles, stoked the fire and watched our neighbor decide that a power outage was a good time for snowblowing.
    • On washdays, the tub was filled with cold water using buckets, and a wood or coal fire was stoked up.
    • She then fell to her knees and worked for a few moments at stoking the fire, tapping the logs with the metal prod first and then using the bellows, her fingers warming as the fire flared higher.
    • Instead he moved a few paces away, sitting by the dying fire and stoking the flames higher.
    • He agreed as he alternately stoked the fire and tossed blueberries into the coals.
    • We spent three hours stoking the fire and drinking - admittedly no great hardship - till I eventually sidled down the hall while my friend stood by ready to enter the security code if I tripped the alarm.
    • Leaning over, she took hold of an iron stick and with it poked at the fire, stoking the dying flames.
    Synonyms
    add fuel to, mend, keep burning, tend, fuel
    1. 1.1 Encourage or incite (a strong emotion or tendency)
      激起;煽起(激情,趋向)
      his composure had the effect of stoking her anger

      他沉着冷静的样子激起了她的愤怒。

      the Chancellor was stoking up a consumer boom

      财政大臣正在鼓励消费的迅速增长。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • She speculated that the shifting social status of women during the war years stoked male anxiety about female bonding and independence from men.
      • When I asked to meet him in person, his publicity people turned cagey, stoking my curiosity even more.
      • It also stokes the emotions, making physical violence more likely.
      • He is a quietly-assured personality, and the pursuit of a physical-education qualification at Rosewell High School in Coatbridge stoked his interest in the mechanics of physiology.
      • Government diverts the debate by stoking hysteria on whether animal rights activists are terrorists, when to terrorise someone with threats of violence or to damage their property is illegal anyway.
      • He and club officials were accused of unnecessarily stoking supporters' emotions with claims that the date showed anti-Celtic bias, and they lost the argument.
      • He stoked interest and intrigue by initially hinting that he might miss this year's race to pursue other goals such as the one-day classics, or the world hour record, only to return next year to try for his seventh win.
      • With the rise of oil wealth, the gap between rich and poor widened, stoking the social discontent that would erupt in the revolution.
      • Unanswered, its effect is to stoke resentment and encourage conflict.
      • These ads are geared to stoke voter emotions and fears to hammer a candidate on a controversial issue.
      • Leftists thrive on blind emotion and stoking that emotion is not helpful.
      • Exactly 100 years ago this week, Wales was in the midst of a fervent religious revival led by a young Methodist, stoking fanatical excitement and emotional excesses.
      • Instead, it has stoked the anger of those who see Charles's refusal to cut ties with his aide as a form of weakness.
      • She'd stoked the partisan passions of her audience - even as she'd sounded an above-partisanship note of concern about the state of the Republic.
      • It stokes fears and antagonisms so familiar that they're apt to seem natural.
      • Undue fear of smallpox, a virus that, if it appears at all, will spread slowly - has stoked unnecessary fear and led to a panicked call for a vaccine which can cause harmful side affects.
      • This was enough to stoke fear and panic among them.
      • The police were acting on behalf of the state Labor government, which has repeatedly sought to outdo the federal government in stoking fears of terrorism.
      • There were some early quotes in the novel that peaked my interest and stoked my hopes for a story with a deeper meaning.
      • Americans took precautions on Tuesday to counter the threat of germ warfare, their fears stoked by the death of one man in Florida from anthrax and a positive test for the disease returned by another man.
    2. 1.2informal no object Consume a large quantity of food or drink to give one energy.
      〈非正式〉(为提供能量而)大吃,大喝
      Carol was at the coffee machine, stoking up for the day

      卡罗尔站在咖啡机旁,喝下了本来一天才能喝完的咖啡。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • They stoked up in all our woods and along our shores before starting their long flights.
      • A steaming bowl of mohinga adorned with vegetable fritters, slices of fish cake and hard-boiled eggs and enhanced with the flavor of chopped coriander leaves, morsels of crispy fried garlic, fish sauce, a squeezing of lime and chilies is a wonderful way of stoking up for the day ahead.
      • Parents trying to feed their nestlings can keep their own bellies filled by stoking up at our suet and seed feeders, but as for their young… we don't know.
      • It is a big, brash, gutsy engine, stoking up a lot of energy for seemingly little effort, and it is just perfect for a big, brash, gutsy car.
      • The following morning, after stoking up well for the day with a self-service full English breakfast, we headed for Our Dynamic Earth, a £34 million project built on three levels.

Origin

Mid 17th century: back-formation from stoker.

Rhymes

awoke, bespoke, bloke, broke, choke, cloak, Coke, convoke, croak, evoke, folk, invoke, joke, Koch, moke, oak, okey-doke, poke, provoke, revoke, roque, smoke, soak, soke, spoke, stony-broke (US stone-broke), stroke, toke, toque, woke, yoke, yolk

Definition of stoke in US English:

stoke

verbstoʊkstōk
[with object]
  • 1Add coal or other solid fuel to (a fire, furnace, boiler, etc.).

    给(火,炉子,锅炉)加煤(或其他固体燃料)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The card showed a 19th century photograph of a young boy, no more than eight, stoking the furnace in a grimy workshop, surrounded by men beavering away along a production line.
    • Leaning over, she took hold of an iron stick and with it poked at the fire, stoking the dying flames.
    • Instead he moved a few paces away, sitting by the dying fire and stoking the flames higher.
    • The furnaces that fed them fizzled out long ago, the coal that stoked the fires lies unexcavated in flooded mines.
    • In the evenings, my mother read to us, and we knitted socks and sweaters for my dad in the army, stoked the fire and listened to the radio, mainly to Children's Hour, and the news, of course.
    • On the first deck, the level at which you board, there is a quite large opening down to the engine room two levels below, so that you can see the engines and the firemen stoking the boilers.
    • After stoking the fire, he circles the room again, searching for cracks and crevices where wind might be seeping in, and the life-sustaining warmth of the fire is escaping.
    • He agreed as he alternately stoked the fire and tossed blueberries into the coals.
    • She strode out of the tent and watched him stoking the fire for a few moments, there was a blustery wind making it stutter and struggle.
    • But the caretaker who has to stoke six boilers each day, cart 12 puds of fuel, carry water on her shoulders so that staff can wash their hands, she receives 12 rubles, has no work clothes, no day off, and no holidays.
    • Although feathers do a fine job of insulating a small bird's body from cold, food is the fuel that stokes its inner fires, keeping its metabolism generating crucial heat and energy.
    • She then fell to her knees and worked for a few moments at stoking the fire, tapping the logs with the metal prod first and then using the bellows, her fingers warming as the fire flared higher.
    • The other is fat-bellied, slack muscled and poor yet shovels in expensive long-term poisons as though stoking the boiler of a battleship.
    • On washdays, the tub was filled with cold water using buckets, and a wood or coal fire was stoked up.
    • I remember my father going out to stoke the furnaces to make sure they didn't go out.
    • Around the little valley, other families are stirring, stoking their fires, planning chores, coming to grips with another day in the wilds of Montana.
    • On a dank autumnal afternoon in Glasgow's west end the light is liquid, a day to draw the blinds and stoke the fire.
    • We lit a bunch of candles, stoked the fire and watched our neighbor decide that a power outage was a good time for snowblowing.
    • We spent three hours stoking the fire and drinking - admittedly no great hardship - till I eventually sidled down the hall while my friend stood by ready to enter the security code if I tripped the alarm.
    • It's very smoky and mysterious and we all sit in silence while a very serene Lap lady in traditional blue and red embroidered costume moves around the room, stoking the fire and watching us carefully.
    Synonyms
    add fuel to, mend, keep burning, tend, fuel
    1. 1.1 Encourage or incite (a strong emotion or tendency)
      激起;煽起(激情,趋向)
      his composure had the effect of stoking her anger

      他沉着冷静的样子激起了她的愤怒。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Americans took precautions on Tuesday to counter the threat of germ warfare, their fears stoked by the death of one man in Florida from anthrax and a positive test for the disease returned by another man.
      • He is a quietly-assured personality, and the pursuit of a physical-education qualification at Rosewell High School in Coatbridge stoked his interest in the mechanics of physiology.
      • This was enough to stoke fear and panic among them.
      • When I asked to meet him in person, his publicity people turned cagey, stoking my curiosity even more.
      • She'd stoked the partisan passions of her audience - even as she'd sounded an above-partisanship note of concern about the state of the Republic.
      • There were some early quotes in the novel that peaked my interest and stoked my hopes for a story with a deeper meaning.
      • He stoked interest and intrigue by initially hinting that he might miss this year's race to pursue other goals such as the one-day classics, or the world hour record, only to return next year to try for his seventh win.
      • She speculated that the shifting social status of women during the war years stoked male anxiety about female bonding and independence from men.
      • Government diverts the debate by stoking hysteria on whether animal rights activists are terrorists, when to terrorise someone with threats of violence or to damage their property is illegal anyway.
      • It also stokes the emotions, making physical violence more likely.
      • He and club officials were accused of unnecessarily stoking supporters' emotions with claims that the date showed anti-Celtic bias, and they lost the argument.
      • Undue fear of smallpox, a virus that, if it appears at all, will spread slowly - has stoked unnecessary fear and led to a panicked call for a vaccine which can cause harmful side affects.
      • The police were acting on behalf of the state Labor government, which has repeatedly sought to outdo the federal government in stoking fears of terrorism.
      • Exactly 100 years ago this week, Wales was in the midst of a fervent religious revival led by a young Methodist, stoking fanatical excitement and emotional excesses.
      • Leftists thrive on blind emotion and stoking that emotion is not helpful.
      • Instead, it has stoked the anger of those who see Charles's refusal to cut ties with his aide as a form of weakness.
      • It stokes fears and antagonisms so familiar that they're apt to seem natural.
      • Unanswered, its effect is to stoke resentment and encourage conflict.
      • These ads are geared to stoke voter emotions and fears to hammer a candidate on a controversial issue.
      • With the rise of oil wealth, the gap between rich and poor widened, stoking the social discontent that would erupt in the revolution.
    2. 1.2informal no object Consume a large quantity of food or drink to give one energy.
      〈非正式〉(为提供能量而)大吃,大喝
      Carol was at the coffee machine, stoking up for the day

      卡罗尔站在咖啡机旁,喝下了本来一天才能喝完的咖啡。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • They stoked up in all our woods and along our shores before starting their long flights.
      • The following morning, after stoking up well for the day with a self-service full English breakfast, we headed for Our Dynamic Earth, a £34 million project built on three levels.
      • It is a big, brash, gutsy engine, stoking up a lot of energy for seemingly little effort, and it is just perfect for a big, brash, gutsy car.
      • A steaming bowl of mohinga adorned with vegetable fritters, slices of fish cake and hard-boiled eggs and enhanced with the flavor of chopped coriander leaves, morsels of crispy fried garlic, fish sauce, a squeezing of lime and chilies is a wonderful way of stoking up for the day ahead.
      • Parents trying to feed their nestlings can keep their own bellies filled by stoking up at our suet and seed feeders, but as for their young… we don't know.

Origin

Mid 17th century: back-formation from stoker.

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更新时间:2024/10/19 12:46:17