Synonyms of the word cook


COOKALTER - CHANGE - CHEAT - CHISEL - FAKE - FALSIFY - FIX - FUDGE - MAKE - MANIPULATE - MISREPRESENT - MODIFY - NAVIGATOR - PREPARE - READY - WANGLE

cook

  • n. (cooking) A person who prepares food for a living.
  • n. (cooking) The head cook of a manor house.
  • n. (slang) One who manufactures certain illegal drugs, especially meth.
  • n. (slang) A session of manufacturing certain illegal drugs, especially meth.
  • n. A fish, the European striped wrasse.
  • v. (transitive) To prepare (food) for eating by heating it, often by combining it with other ingredients.
  • v. (intransitive) To prepare (unspecified) food for eating by heating it, often by combining it with other…
  • v. (intransitive) To be being cooked.
  • v. (intransitive, figuratively) To be uncomfortably hot.
  • v. (transitive, slang) To hold onto (a grenade) briefly after igniting the fuse, so that it explodes almost…
  • v. To concoct or prepare.
  • v. To tamper with or alter; to cook up.
  • v. (intransitive, idiomatic, jazz, slang) To play or improvise in an inspired and rhythmically exciting way…
  • v. (intransitive, idiomatic, music, slang) To play music vigorously.
  • v. (obsolete, rare, intransitive) To make the noise of the cuckoo.
  • v. (Britain, dialect, obsolete) To throw.

alter

  • v. (transitive) To change the form or structure of.
  • v. (intransitive) To become different.
  • v. (transitive) To tailor clothes to make them fit.
  • v. (transitive) To castrate, neuter or spay (a dog or other animal).
  • v. (transitive, obsolete) To agitate; to affect mentally.

change

  • v. (intransitive) To become something different.
  • v. (transitive, ergative) To make something into something different.
  • v. (transitive) To replace.
  • v. (intransitive) To replace one's clothing.
  • v. (intransitive) To transfer to another vehicle (train, bus, etc.).
  • v. (archaic) To exchange.
  • v. (transitive) To change hand while riding (a horse).
  • n. (countable) The process of becoming different.
  • n. (uncountable) Small denominations of money given in exchange for a larger denomination.
  • n. (countable) A replacement, e.g. a change of clothes.
  • n. (uncountable) Money given back when a customer hands over more than the exact price of an item.
  • n. (uncountable) Coins (as opposed to paper money).
  • n. (countable) A transfer between vehicles.
  • n. (baseball) A change-up pitch.
  • n. (campanology) Any order in which a number of bells are struck, other than that of the diatonic scale.
  • n. (dated) A place where merchants and others meet to transact business; an exchange.
  • n. (Scotland, dated) A public house; an alehouse.

cheat

  • v. (intransitive) To violate rules in order to gain advantage from a situation.
  • v. (intransitive) To be unfaithful to one's spouse or partner.
  • v. (transitive) To manage to avoid something even though it seemed unlikely.
  • v. (transitive) To deceive; to fool; to trick.
  • v. To beguile.
  • n. Someone who cheats (informal: cheater).
  • n. An act of deception or fraud; that which is the means of fraud or deception; a fraud; a trick; imposition;…
  • n. The weed cheatgrass.
  • n. A card game where the goal is to have no cards remaining in a hand, often by telling lies.
  • n. (video games) A hidden means of gaining an unfair advantage in a computer game, often by entering a cheat…

chisel

  • n. Gravel.
  • n. (usually in the plural) Coarse flour; bran; the coarser part of bran or flour.
  • n. A cutting tool consisting of a slim oblong block of metal with a sharp wedge or bevel formed on one end…
  • v. (intransitive) To use a chisel.
  • v. (transitive) To work something with a chisel.
  • v. (intransitive, informal) To cheat, to get something by cheating.

fake

  • adj. Not real; false, fraudulent.
  • adj. Deliberately fabricated in order to deceive.
  • n. Something which is not genuine, or is presented fraudulently.
  • n. A trick; a swindle.
  • n. (sports) A move meant to deceive an opposing player, used for gaining advantage for example when dribbling…
  • v. To cheat; to swindle; to steal; to rob.
  • v. (archaic) To modify fraudulently, so as to make an object appear better or other than it really is.
  • v. To make a counterfeit, to counterfeit, to forge, to falsify.
  • v. To make a false display of, to affect, to feign, to simulate.
  • n. (nautical) One of the circles or windings of a cable or hawser, as it lies in a coil; a single turn or…
  • v. (nautical) To coil (a rope, line, or hawser), by winding alternately in opposite directions, in layers…

falsify

  • v. (transitive) To alter so as to make false; to make incorrect.
  • v. (transitive) To misrepresent.
  • v. (transitive) To prove to be false.
  • v. (transitive) To counterfeit; to forge.
  • v. (transitive, finance) To show, in accounting, (an item of charge inserted in an account) to be wrong.
  • v. (transitive, obsolete) To baffle or escape.
  • v. (transitive, obsolete) To violate; to break by falsehood.

fix

  • n. A repair or corrective action.
  • n. A difficult situation; a quandary or dilemma.
  • n. (informal) A single dose of an addictive drug administered to a drug user.
  • n. A prearrangement of the outcome of a supposedly competitive process, such as a sporting event, a game,…
  • n. A determination of location.
  • n. (US) fettlings (mixture used to line a furnace).
  • v. (transitive, obsolete) To pierce; now generally replaced by transfix.
  • v. (transitive) To attach; to affix; to hold in place or at a particular time.
  • v. (transitive) To mend, to repair.
  • v. (transitive, informal) To prepare (food).
  • v. (transitive) To make (a contest, vote, or gamble) unfair; to privilege one contestant or a particular…
  • v. (transitive, US, informal) To surgically render an animal, especially a pet, infertile.
  • v. (transitive, mathematics, sematics) To map a (point or subset) to itself.
  • v. (transitive, informal) To take revenge on, to best; to serve justice on an assumed miscreant.
  • v. (transitive) To render (a photographic impression) permanent by treating with such applications as will…
  • v. (transitive, chemistry, biology) To convert into a stable or available form.
  • v. (intransitive) To become fixed; to settle or remain permanently; to cease from wandering; to rest.
  • v. (intransitive) To become firm, so as to resist volatilization; to cease to flow or be fluid; to congeal;…

fudge

  • n. (chiefly uncountable) Light or frothy nonsense.
  • n. (chiefly uncountable) A type of very sweet candy or confection. Often used in the US synonymously with…
  • n. (countable) A deliberately misleading or vague answer.
  • n. (uncountable, dated) A made-up story; nonsense; humbug.
  • n. (countable) A less than perfect decision or solution; an attempt to fix an incorrect solution after the…
  • v. (intransitive) To try to avoid giving a direct answer; to waffle or equivocate.
  • v. To alter something from its true state, as to hide a flaw or uncertainty. Always deliberate, but not necessarily…
  • interj. (minced oath) Colloquially, used in place of fuck.

make

  • v. (transitive, heading) To create.
  • v. (intransitive, now mostly colloquial) To behave, to act.
  • v. (intransitive) To tend; to contribute; to have effect; with for or against.
  • v. To constitute.
  • v. (intransitive, construed with of, typically interrogative) To interpret.
  • v. (transitive, usually stressed) To bring into success.
  • v. (transitive, second object is an adjective or participle) To cause to be.
  • v. To cause to appear to be; to represent as.
  • v. (transitive, second object is a verb) To cause (to do something); to compel (to do something).
  • v. (transitive, second object is a verb, can be stressed for emphasis or clarity) To force to do.
  • v. (transitive, of a fact) To indicate or suggest to be.
  • v. (transitive, of a bed) To cover neatly with bedclothes.
  • v. (transitive, US slang) To recognise, identify.
  • v. (transitive, colloquial) To arrive at a destination, usually at or by a certain time.
  • v. (intransitive, colloquial) To proceed (in a direction).
  • v. (transitive) To cover (a given distance) by travelling.
  • v. (transitive) To move at (a speed).
  • v. To appoint; to name.
  • v. (transitive, slang) To induct into the Mafia or a similar organization (as a made man).
  • v. (intransitive, colloquial, euphemistic) To defecate or urinate.
  • v. (transitive) To earn, to gain (money, points, membership or status).
  • v. (transitive) To pay, to cover (an expense); chiefly used after expressions of inability.
  • v. (obsolete, intransitive) To compose verses; to write poetry; to versify.
  • v. To enact; to establish.
  • v. To develop into; to prove to be.
  • v. To form or formulate in the mind.
  • v. (obsolete) To act in a certain manner; to have to do; to manage; to interfere; to be active; often in…
  • v. (obsolete) To increase; to augment; to accrue.
  • v. (obsolete) To be engaged or concerned in.
  • v. (now archaic) To cause to be (in a specified place), used after a subjective what.
  • v. (transitive, euphemistic) To take the virginity of.
  • n. (often of a car) Brand or kind; often paired with model.
  • n. How a thing is made; construction.
  • n. Origin of a manufactured article; manufacture.
  • n. (uncountable) Quantity produced, especially of materials.
  • n. (dated) The act or process of making something, especially in industrial manufacturing.
  • n. A person's character or disposition.
  • n. (bridge) The declaration of the trump for a hand.
  • n. (physics) The closing of an electrical circuit.
  • n. (computing) A software utility for automatically building large applications, or an implementation of…
  • n. (slang) Recognition or identification, especially from police records or evidence.
  • n. (slang, usually in phrase "easy make") Past or future target of seduction (usually female).
  • n. (slang, military) A promotion.
  • n. A home-made project.
  • n. (basketball) A made basket.
  • n. (dialectal) Mate; a spouse or companion.
  • n. (Scotland, Ireland, Northern England, now rare) A halfpenny.

manipulate

  • v. (transitive) To move, arrange or operate something using the hands.
  • v. (transitive) To influence, manage, direct, control or tamper with something.
  • v. (transitive, medicine) To handle and move a body part, either as an examination or for a therapeutic purpose.
  • v. (transitive) To influence or control someone in order to achieve a specific purpose, especially one that…

misrepresent

  • v. To represent falsely; to inaccurately portray something.

modify

  • v. (transitive) To make partial changes to.
  • v. (intransitive) To be or become modified.

navigator

  • n. A person who navigates, especially an officer with that responsibility on a ship or an aircrew member…
  • n. A sea explorer.
  • n. A device that navigates an aircraft, automobile or missile.
  • n. (obsolete) A labourer on an engineering project such as a canal; a navvy.

prepare

  • v. (transitive) To make ready for a specific future purpose; to set up; to assemble.
  • v. (transitive) To make ready for eating or drinking; to cook.
  • v. (intransitive) To make oneself ready; to get ready, make preparation.
  • v. (transitive) To produce or make by combining elements; to synthesize, compound.
  • n. (obsolete) preparation.

ready

  • adj. Prepared for immediate action or use.
  • adj. Inclined; apt to happen.
  • adj. Liable at any moment.
  • adj. Not slow or hesitating; quick in action or perception of any kind; dexterous; prompt; easy; expert.
  • adj. Offering itself at once; at hand; opportune; convenient.
  • v. To make prepared for action.
  • n. (slang) ready money; cash.

wangle

  • v. (transitive) To obtain through manipulative or deceitful methods.
  • v. (transitive) To falsify, as records.
  • v. (intransitive) To achieve through contrivance or cajolery.
  • n. The act of wangling.

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