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cock
1[ kok ]
noun
- a male chicken; rooster.
- the male of any bird, especially a gallinaceous bird.
- Also called stopcock. a hand-operated valve or faucet, especially one opened or closed by rotating a cylindrical or tapered plug having part of the passage pierced through it from side to side.
- (in a firearm)
- the part of the lock that, by its fall or action, causes the discharge; hammer.
- the position into which the cock, or hammer, is brought by being drawn partly or completely back, preparatory to firing.
- Slang: Vulgar.
- sexual relations with a man.
- a weathercock.
- a leader; chief person.
- Chiefly British Informal. pal; chum.
- British Slang. nonsense.
- Horology. a bracketlike plate holding bearings, supported at one end only. Compare bridge 1( def 17 ).
- Archaic. the time of the crowing of the cock; early in the morning; cockcrow.
verb (used with object)
- to pull back and set the cock, or hammer, of (a firearm) preparatory to firing.
- to draw back in preparation for throwing or hitting:
He cocked his bat and waited for the pitch.
- to set (a camera shutter or other mechanism) for tripping. Compare trip 1( def 28 ).
verb (used without object)
- to cock the firing mechanism of a firearm.
cock
2[ kok ]
verb (used with object)
- to set or turn up or to one side, often in an assertive, jaunty, or significant manner:
He cocked his eyebrow questioningly.
verb (used without object)
- to stand or stick up conspicuously.
- Scot. and New England. to strut; swagger; put on airs of importance.
noun
- the act of turning the head, a hat, etc., up or to one side in a jaunty or significant way.
- the position of anything thus placed.
cock
3[ kok ]
noun
- a conical pile of hay, dung, etc.
verb (used with object)
- to pile (hay, dung, etc.) in cocks.
cock
1/ kɒk /
noun
- the male of the domestic fowl
- any other male bird
- the male of certain other animals, such as the lobster
- ( as modifier )
a cock sparrow
- short for stopcock weathercock
- a taboo slang word for penis
- the hammer of a firearm
- its position when the firearm is ready to be discharged
- informal.a friend, mate, or fellow
- a jaunty or significant tilting or turning upwards
a cock of the head
- informal.nonsense
verb
- tr to set the firing pin, hammer, or breech block of (a firearm) so that a pull on the trigger will release it and thus fire the weapon
- tr to set the shutter mechanism of (a camera) so that the shutter can be tripped by pressing the shutter-release button
- trsometimes foll byup to raise in an alert or jaunty manner
- intr to stick or stand up conspicuously
cock
2/ kɒk /
noun
- a small, cone-shaped heap of hay, straw, etc
verb
- tr to stack (hay, straw, etc) in such heaps
Other Words From
- cock·like adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of cock1
Origin of cock3
Word History and Origins
Origin of cock1
Origin of cock2
Idioms and Phrases
- cock a snook. snook 2( def 2 ).
Example Sentences
Three times,” he says angrily, “thou shalt betray me ere the cock crows.
They were often based on nursery rhymes, like The Death & Burial of Cock Robin or The Babes in the Wood.
So, Donnie whips out his cock and starts beating it in front of Naomi and the entire party.
Some of us fill it out more width-wise than length-wise, so I always get ring around the cock.
So it may not even in the end be an IRS scandal—just a procedural cock-up that they fixed.
The well-known "cock and bull" stories of small children are inspired by this love of strong effect.
A four-way cock near the top of the cylinder turned the steam on and off.
The cock springs out of its seat when water gets into the cylinder, and prevents any mischief from the velocity of the fly-wheel.
But he denied, saying, "I neither know nor understand what thou sayest," and he went out into the porch; and the cock crew.
He wore a cock feather over his ear, and on his head a diadem set with enormous gems.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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