stoke
stoke 英 [stəʊk] 美 [stoʊk]
vi. 烧火;做司炉工;大吃大喝 vt. 拨旺火;使饱吃一顿
进行时:stoking 过去式:stoked 过去分词:stoked 第三人称单数:stokes 名词复数:stokes
- To stoke is to poke a fire and fuel it so that it burns higher. It can also mean "incite"––a principal's impassive silence in the face of requests for more tater tots might stoke the flames of student anger.
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- vi. 烧火;做司炉工;大吃大喝
- vt. 拨旺火;使饱吃一顿
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1. The goal of my life is to encourage more people to enjoy the treasures of the outdoors and stoke Park really is an incredible place.
我的人生目标是鼓励更多的人享受户外生活的好处,斯托克公园实在是一个令人不可思议的好地方。
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2. But fall out of touch, and hunger becomes diet enemy number one: You may eat more than you need or get too hungry and stoke out-of-control cravings.
但是一旦离开感觉,饥饿会变成食物的头号敌人:你可能会吃得比你需要的量多或者有太饥饿并想不受控制地大吃的愿望。
- stoke (v.) 1680s, "to feed and stir up a fire in a fireplace or furnace," back-formation from stoker (1650s); ultimately from Dutch stoken "to stoke," from Middle Dutch stoken "to poke, thrust," related to stoc "stick, stump," from Proto-Germanic *stok- "pierce, prick," from PIE *steug-, extended form of root *(s)teu- (1) "to push, stick, knock, beat" (see stick (v.)).
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