Etymology: [ kuk ] (noun.) before 12th century. From Old English cōc, from Latin cocus. Similar forms in the continental Germanic languages (German Koch etc.) represent earlier borrowings.
yemek pişirmek, aşçı, pişirmek, yemek yapmak, muhasebe hilesi, hazırlamak, ahçı, uydurmak, mahvetmek, pişmek, oynama yapmak, cook piş/pişir, birinin karısı, pişir(mek), cookbook yemek kitabı, Too many cooks spoil the broth idarecinin çok olduğu yerde iş yürümez, yapmak, k.dili. (hesaplar) üzerinde oynamak, pişir, (isim) aşçı, yemek pişirme, aşçılık, bisküvi, aşçılar, bir aşçı, piş, çerezler, mutfak, pişirilmiş, tanımlama bilgileri, yemeklik, yemek pişirme/pişme, yemek pişirme sanatı, yemek pişirmede kullanılan, pişim, pişirmeye uygun, piş/pişir, pişirerek,
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yemek pişirmek
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aşçı isim
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pişirmek fiil
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yemek yapmak fiil
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muhasebe hilesi Ticaret
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hazırlamak
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ahçı
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uydurmak fiil
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mahvetmek
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pişmek
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oynama yapmak
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cook piş/pişir
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birinin karısı Argo
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pişir(mek)
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cookbook yemek kitabı
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Too many cooks spoil the broth idarecinin çok olduğu yerde iş yürümez
An English occupational surname for a cook, or a seller of cooked food, Of food, to become ready for eating by the application of heat, Of a person, to prepare food for eating by heating it, often by combining it with other ingredients, To prepare (food) for eating by heating it, often by combining it with other ingredients, A person who prepares food for a living, To be uncomfortably hot, steward, family name; Captain James Cook (1728-1779), English navigator and explorer, an English occupational name (surname) for a cook, or a seller of cooked food, To make the noise of the cuckoo, One whose occupation is to prepare food for the table; one who dresses or cooks meat or vegetables for eating, prepare food by heating; transform by heating; be prepared by heating (of food); falsify account records, To throw, (colloquial) To be uncomfortably hot, To prepare, as food, by boiling, roasting, baking, broiling, etc, English navigator who claimed the east coast of Australia for Britain and discovered several Pacific islands (1728-1779), someone who cooks food, prepare a hot meal; "My husband doesn't cook", transform and make suitable for consumption by heating; "These potatoes have to cook for 20 minutes", fake or falsify; "Fudge the figures"; "cook the books"; "falsify the data", If you say that someone has cooked the books, you mean that they have changed figures or a written record in order to deceive people. see also cooking. British navigator and explorer who commanded three major voyages of discovery, charting and naming many islands of the Pacific Ocean. He also sailed along the coast of North America as far north as the Bering Strait. Carter Elliott Cook Jr. Connelly Marcus Cook Cook Inlet Cook Islands Cook Strait Cook James Captain Cook Cook Thomas Mount Cook National Park William Cook, If you say that someone is a good cook, you mean they are good at preparing and cooking food, one who prepares food, chef, When you cook a meal, you prepare food for eating by heating it. I have to go and cook the dinner Chefs at the St James Court restaurant have cooked for the Queen We'll cook them a nice Italian meal. + cooking cook·ing Her hobbies include music, dancing, sport and cooking, When you cook food, or when food cooks, it is heated until it is ready to be eaten. some basic instructions on how to cook a turkey Let the vegetables cook gently for about 10 minutes Drain the pasta as soon as it is cooked, A cook is a person whose job is to prepare and cook food, especially in someone's home or in an institution. They had a butler, a cook, and a maid. = chef, 1) Act of preparing food for consumption 2) Mom's other name, 1 Act of preparing food for consumption 2 Mom's other name, someone who cooks food English navigator who claimed the east coast of Australia for Britain and discovered several Pacific islands (1728-1779) transform and make suitable for consumption by heating; "These potatoes have to cook for 20 minutes", transform by heating; "The apothecary cooked the medicinal mixture in a big iron kettle", To prepare food for the table, To concoct or prepare; hence, to tamper with or alter; to garble; often with up; as, to cook up a story; to cook an account, to make suitable for eating, by the agency of fire or heat, prepare for eating by applying heat; "Cook me dinner, please"; "can you make me an omelette?"; "fix breakfast for the guests, please", prepare a hot meal; "My husband doesn't cook, 1 Act of preparing food for consumption, the person in charge of planning the feast, and supervising its execution, usually assisted by a variety of skilled volunteers, or willing unskilled volunteers, n tukang masak (masak) 2 vt memasak (masak), To heat and dissolve a drug in water, A fish, the European striped wrasse, do, Simple past tense and past participle of cook, Of food, that has been prepared by cooking, Corrupted by conversion through a text format, requiring uncooking to be properly listenable, partially or wholly fabricated, falsified, The process of preparing food by using heat, In progress, happening, Present participle of cook, The style or genre of food preparation; cookery, trencherman, ‘Cooked’ data, as distinct from ‘raw,’ is a collection of elements and character data that's ready for presentation The processor is not expected to rearrange, select, or suppress any of the elements, but simply present them as specified See Also Raw,
"Cooked" data, as distinct from "raw," is a collection of elements and character data that's ready for presentation The processor is not expected to rearrange, select, or suppress any of the elements, but simply present them as specified See Also: Raw, Heavy, pruney flavor; also said of wines from very hot growing regions or wines that are overripe, A step in the cheesemaking process when the cheese curd is heated, sometimes in the surplus whey Cooked cheeses are all hard cheeses such as Emmentaler and other Swiss types, past of cook, “Cooked” data, as distinct from “raw,” is a collection of elements and character data that's ready for presentation The processor is not expected to rearrange, select, or suppress any of the elements, but simply present them as specified See Also Raw, A typical taste of an instant coffee treated at too high a temperature, having been prepared for eating by the application of heat, "Cooked" data, as distinct from "raw," is a collection of elements and character data that's ready for presentation The processor is not expected to rearrange, select, or suppress any of the elements, but simply present them as specified See Also: Raw, prepared by heat, The most common meaning of "Cookie" on the Internet refers to a piece of information sent by a Web Server to a Web Browser that the Browser software is expected to save and to send back to the Server whenever the browser makes additional requests from the Server, Small data files written to a user's hard drive by a web server These files contain specific information that identifies users (e g , passwords and lists of pages visited), PE saves certain information between sessions on your computer This information includes the most recently loaded molecules (for the Select previously loaded PDB file menu on the Load Molecules control page), preferences, The browser mechanism for saving such information is called "cookies" for obscure reasons Here is more information about cookies and cookie safety, The name for files stored on your hard drive by your Web browser that holds information about your identity or browsing habits A common type of cookie is a user name and password cookie that is used by a Web site you visit frequently so you do not have to retype in a user name and password with each visit, Small files that are downloaded to your computer when you browse certain web pages Cookies hold information that can be retrieved by other web pages on the site, biscuits, Small text files created by an Internet web site and stored on the user's computer A cookie contains information that can help speed access on subsequent visits, such as passwords and details of the user's display facilities, plural of cookie, Information a site can store and retrieve from your computer about what you do on that site Find the file "cookies txt" on your computer to learn more, A way to store information behind an HTML document for the server from the client side Cookies retrieve information from the client's browser Why? When you shop on the net or have to enter preferences on a particular site, the server stores that information for your use so you don't have to fill out additional forms or preferences each time you visit It's kind of like having a customer account with a web site, A cookie is a small piece of textual information, sent to your browser from the website or web server you are visiting If a site you visit uses cookies, that site's web server queries your browser for permission to pass a cookie to your browser's directory At a minimum, any cookie saved in your browser's directory is stored in RAM during your session Many sites also store the cookie on your hard drive in a text file after you leave (log off) their site Cookies are used for many purposes such as website tracking, shopping cart identification, ascertaining information about the machine you are using, personalizing your site visit, and storing information like passwords and user ID's for a particular site The web server issuing the cookie, is the only server that can read that particular cookie Cookies cannot retrieve information from your hard drive or profile your system, A means by which, under the HTTP protocol, a server or a script can maintain information on the client computer Cookies are small text files which are stored in the user's browser by the Web server Cookies contain information about the user such as an identification number, a password, how a user shopped on a Web site, or how many times the user visited that site A Web site can access cookie information whenever the user connects to the server, Cookies are small text files that Web sites place in your computer to help your browsers remember specific information For example, they might store your passwords and user IDs They are also used to store your preferences for content or personalized pages Most shopping carts use cookies These allow you to choose items and leave the virtual store, then return later and find that all the items are still in your shopping cart Cookies are also used to build a profile of which sites you visit and which banner ads you click on Advertisers use this information to deliver targeted ads directly to your computer Some sites save your preferences on the cookie itself Other sites assign users ID numbers or encoded passwords and keep records of your preferences at their end Some sites use temporary cookies (called session cookies) that are deleted when you exit your browser Others place persistent cookies, which stay on your hard drive for long periods, Cookies are small text files that are created by some Websites and stored on your hard drive Cookies are used so that a Website can "remember" you the next time you visit it and present you with a customised page, such as one containing your name, These aren't the kind your Grandma used to make! Web cookies are files containing information about visitors to a website, like username, password, and what they want to buy It is stored on the visitor's computer, and sent back to the website that created it when the visitor comes back or gets to the order page Cookies can also retrieve information like monitor resolution and platform to webmasters who intend to use this information to improve their website, A message given to a Web browser by a Web server The browser stores the message in a text file The message is then sent back to the server each time the browser requests a page from the server The main purpose of cookies is to identify users and possibly prepare customized Web pages for them When you enter a Web site using cookies, you may be asked to fill out a form providing such information as your name and interests This information is packaged into a cookie and sent to your Web browser which stores it for later use The next time you go to the same Web site, your browser will send the cookie to the Web server The server can use this information to present you with custom Web pages So, for example, instead of seeing just a generic welcome page you might see a welcome page with your name on it, A cookie is a file sent to a web browser by a web server to record one's activities on a website For instance, when you buy items from a site and place them in a so-called virtual shopping cart, that information is stored in the cookie When the browser requests additional files, the cookie information is sent back to the server Cookies can remember other kinds of personal information --your password, so you don't have to re-enter it each time you visit the site; your preferences, so the next time you return to a site, you can be presented with customized information Some people regard cookies as an invasion of privacy; others think they are a harmless way to make websites more personal, Persistent Client-State HTTP Cookies are files containing information about visitors to a web site (e g user name and preferences) This information is provided by the user during the first visit to a web server The server records this information in a text file and stores this file on the visitor's hard drive When the visitor accesses the same web site again the server looks for the cookie and configures itself based on the information provided, A cookie is a text file placed on your hard drive by some Web pages that you visit The cookie allows the Webmaster to track your visits to their Website as well as correlate that information with other information such as the previous page you visited, your operating system, your browser plus any information that you volunteer via a form When you return to that Website the site will retrieve your cookie file from your hard drive and use whatever information is stored to target content and advertising to both your stated preferences (where asked) and the behavior that you exhibited It is this technology that allows you to store items in an electronic shopping basket and "remember" other useful pieces of information such as passwords, A means by which, under the HTTP protocol, a server or a script can maintain state or status information on the client workstation In other words, a cookie is bits of information about a person's visit to a Web page A cookie can include such information as the way a Web page was customized or how a visitor shopped on a Web site, or it can be used to track repeat visits, Cookies are almost invisible packets of information stored on your computer These packets save information that allow you to visit particular web sites faster Passwords, preferences and personal information are stored in these cookies and sent from your computer to the particular web site to save you from having to log on and fill out a bunch of information every time you visit a particular site It's like Norm walking into Cheers without having to be reintroduced to the bar patrons every time, Persistent Client-State HTTP Cookies are files containing information about visitors to a web site (e g , user name and preferences) This information is provided by the visitor during the first visit to a Web server The server records this information in a text file and stores this file on the visitor's hard drive When the visitor accesses the same web site again, the server looks for the cookie and configures itself based on the information provided, Small files that are automatically downloaded from a Web server to the hard drive of someone browsing a Web site Information stored in cookies can then be accessed any time that computer returns to the site Cookies allow Web sites to "personalize" their appearance by identifying visitors, storing passwords, tracking preferences, and other possibilities, These little guys are used to store information on your computer Cookies provide Website customization features Some later browser versions allow you to know in advance that a cookie is coming your way in which case you may decide you do or do not want to accept the cookie, A cookie is a small piece of information When visiting someweb sites a small packet of data, or cookie, is stored on your harddisk and accessed by the web server every time you move around thesite This allows the site to record information about the qualityof navigation as well as user habits and interests, A cookie is a piece of information stored on a user's hard disk which is attributed when they visit a specific site It is a text file, not a program A site can only read the information in a cookie which was written by that site The information that can be stored in a cookie consists of the date and time of the visit and any information given whilst on the site A cookie can be created, for example, when shopping on a web site and accessed by the site if the user visits again, the act of preparing something (as food) by the application of heat; "cooking can be a great art"; "people are needed who have experience in cookery"; "he left the preparation of meals to his wife, Cooking ingredients or equipment are used in cookery. Finely slice the cooking apples. cooking pots. see also cook. suitable for or used in cooking, act of preparing food with heat, Cooking is food which has been cooked. The menu is based on classic French cooking, third-person singular of cook, plural of , cook,
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An English occupational surname for a cook, or a seller of cooked food
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Of food, to become ready for eating by the application of heat - "The dinner is cooking on the stove."
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Of a person, to prepare food for eating by heating it, often by combining it with other ingredients - "He's in the kitchen, cooking."
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To prepare (food) for eating by heating it, often by combining it with other ingredients
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A person who prepares food for a living
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To be uncomfortably hot - "Look at that poor dog shut up in that car on a day like today - it must be cooking in there."
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steward
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family name; Captain James Cook (1728-1779), English navigator and explorer isim
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an English occupational name (surname) for a cook, or a seller of cooked food
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To make the noise of the cuckoo
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One whose occupation is to prepare food for the table; one who dresses or cooks meat or vegetables for eating
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prepare food by heating; transform by heating; be prepared by heating (of food); falsify account records fiil
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To throw
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(colloquial) To be uncomfortably hot
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To prepare, as food, by boiling, roasting, baking, broiling, etc
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English navigator who claimed the east coast of Australia for Britain and discovered several Pacific islands (1728-1779)
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someone who cooks food
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prepare a hot meal; "My husband doesn't cook"
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transform and make suitable for consumption by heating; "These potatoes have to cook for 20 minutes"
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fake or falsify; "Fudge the figures"; "cook the books"; "falsify the data"
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If you say that someone has cooked the books, you mean that they have changed figures or a written record in order to deceive people. see also cooking. British navigator and explorer who commanded three major voyages of discovery, charting and naming many islands of the Pacific Ocean. He also sailed along the coast of North America as far north as the Bering Strait. Carter Elliott Cook Jr. Connelly Marcus Cook Cook Inlet Cook Islands Cook Strait Cook James Captain Cook Cook Thomas Mount Cook National Park William Cook
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If you say that someone is a good cook, you mean they are good at preparing and cooking food
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one who prepares food, chef isim
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When you cook a meal, you prepare food for eating by heating it. I have to go and cook the dinner Chefs at the St James Court restaurant have cooked for the Queen We'll cook them a nice Italian meal. + cooking cook·ing Her hobbies include music, dancing, sport and cooking
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When you cook food, or when food cooks, it is heated until it is ready to be eaten. some basic instructions on how to cook a turkey Let the vegetables cook gently for about 10 minutes Drain the pasta as soon as it is cooked
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A cook is a person whose job is to prepare and cook food, especially in someone's home or in an institution. They had a butler, a cook, and a maid. = chef
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1) Act of preparing food for consumption 2) Mom's other name
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1 Act of preparing food for consumption 2 Mom's other name
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someone who cooks food English navigator who claimed the east coast of Australia for Britain and discovered several Pacific islands (1728-1779) transform and make suitable for consumption by heating; "These potatoes have to cook for 20 minutes"
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transform by heating; "The apothecary cooked the medicinal mixture in a big iron kettle"
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To prepare food for the table
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To concoct or prepare; hence, to tamper with or alter; to garble; often with up; as, to cook up a story; to cook an account
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to make suitable for eating, by the agency of fire or heat
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prepare for eating by applying heat; "Cook me dinner, please"; "can you make me an omelette?"; "fix breakfast for the guests, please"
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prepare a hot meal; "My husband doesn't cook
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1 Act of preparing food for consumption
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the person in charge of planning the feast, and supervising its execution, usually assisted by a variety of skilled volunteers, or willing unskilled volunteers
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n tukang masak (masak) 2 vt memasak (masak)
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To heat and dissolve a drug in water
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A fish, the European striped wrasse
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To cook.
do - "I'll just do some eggs."
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cooked
Simple past tense and past participle of cook
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cooked
Of food, that has been prepared by cooking
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cooked
Corrupted by conversion through a text format, requiring uncooking to be properly listenable
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cooked
partially or wholly fabricated, falsified
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cooking
The process of preparing food by using heat
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cooking
In progress, happening - "The project took a few days to gain momentum, but by the end of the week, things were really cooking."
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cooking
Present participle of cook
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cooking
The style or genre of food preparation; cookery
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A cook
trencherman
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cooked
‘Cooked’ data, as distinct from ‘raw,’ is a collection of elements and character data that's ready for presentation The processor is not expected to rearrange, select, or suppress any of the elements, but simply present them as specified See Also Raw
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cooked
"Cooked" data, as distinct from "raw," is a collection of elements and character data that's ready for presentation The processor is not expected to rearrange, select, or suppress any of the elements, but simply present them as specified See Also: Raw
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cooked
Heavy, pruney flavor; also said of wines from very hot growing regions or wines that are overripe
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cooked
A step in the cheesemaking process when the cheese curd is heated, sometimes in the surplus whey Cooked cheeses are all hard cheeses such as Emmentaler and other Swiss types
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cooked
past of cook
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cooked
“Cooked” data, as distinct from “raw,” is a collection of elements and character data that's ready for presentation The processor is not expected to rearrange, select, or suppress any of the elements, but simply present them as specified See Also Raw
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cooked
A typical taste of an instant coffee treated at too high a temperature
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cooked
having been prepared for eating by the application of heat
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cooked
"Cooked" data, as distinct from "raw," is a collection of elements and character data that's ready for presentation The processor is not expected to rearrange, select, or suppress any of the elements, but simply present them as specified See Also: Raw
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cooked
prepared by heat sıfat
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99
cookies
The most common meaning of "Cookie" on the Internet refers to a piece of information sent by a Web Server to a Web Browser that the Browser software is expected to save and to send back to the Server whenever the browser makes additional requests from the Server
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cookies
Small data files written to a user's hard drive by a web server These files contain specific information that identifies users (e g , passwords and lists of pages visited)
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cookies
PE saves certain information between sessions on your computer This information includes the most recently loaded molecules (for the Select previously loaded PDB file menu on the Load Molecules control page), preferences, The browser mechanism for saving such information is called "cookies" for obscure reasons Here is more information about cookies and cookie safety
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cookies
The name for files stored on your hard drive by your Web browser that holds information about your identity or browsing habits A common type of cookie is a user name and password cookie that is used by a Web site you visit frequently so you do not have to retype in a user name and password with each visit
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103
cookies
Small files that are downloaded to your computer when you browse certain web pages Cookies hold information that can be retrieved by other web pages on the site
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cookies
biscuits
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cookies
Small text files created by an Internet web site and stored on the user's computer A cookie contains information that can help speed access on subsequent visits, such as passwords and details of the user's display facilities
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cookies
plural of cookie
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cookies
Information a site can store and retrieve from your computer about what you do on that site Find the file "cookies txt" on your computer to learn more
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108
cookies
A way to store information behind an HTML document for the server from the client side Cookies retrieve information from the client's browser Why? When you shop on the net or have to enter preferences on a particular site, the server stores that information for your use so you don't have to fill out additional forms or preferences each time you visit It's kind of like having a customer account with a web site
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109
cookies
A cookie is a small piece of textual information, sent to your browser from the website or web server you are visiting If a site you visit uses cookies, that site's web server queries your browser for permission to pass a cookie to your browser's directory At a minimum, any cookie saved in your browser's directory is stored in RAM during your session Many sites also store the cookie on your hard drive in a text file after you leave (log off) their site Cookies are used for many purposes such as website tracking, shopping cart identification, ascertaining information about the machine you are using, personalizing your site visit, and storing information like passwords and user ID's for a particular site The web server issuing the cookie, is the only server that can read that particular cookie Cookies cannot retrieve information from your hard drive or profile your system
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cookies
A means by which, under the HTTP protocol, a server or a script can maintain information on the client computer Cookies are small text files which are stored in the user's browser by the Web server Cookies contain information about the user such as an identification number, a password, how a user shopped on a Web site, or how many times the user visited that site A Web site can access cookie information whenever the user connects to the server
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111
cookies
Cookies are small text files that Web sites place in your computer to help your browsers remember specific information For example, they might store your passwords and user IDs They are also used to store your preferences for content or personalized pages Most shopping carts use cookies These allow you to choose items and leave the virtual store, then return later and find that all the items are still in your shopping cart Cookies are also used to build a profile of which sites you visit and which banner ads you click on Advertisers use this information to deliver targeted ads directly to your computer Some sites save your preferences on the cookie itself Other sites assign users ID numbers or encoded passwords and keep records of your preferences at their end Some sites use temporary cookies (called session cookies) that are deleted when you exit your browser Others place persistent cookies, which stay on your hard drive for long periods
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112
cookies
Cookies are small text files that are created by some Websites and stored on your hard drive Cookies are used so that a Website can "remember" you the next time you visit it and present you with a customised page, such as one containing your name
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cookies
These aren't the kind your Grandma used to make! Web cookies are files containing information about visitors to a website, like username, password, and what they want to buy It is stored on the visitor's computer, and sent back to the website that created it when the visitor comes back or gets to the order page Cookies can also retrieve information like monitor resolution and platform to webmasters who intend to use this information to improve their website
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114
cookies
A message given to a Web browser by a Web server The browser stores the message in a text file The message is then sent back to the server each time the browser requests a page from the server The main purpose of cookies is to identify users and possibly prepare customized Web pages for them When you enter a Web site using cookies, you may be asked to fill out a form providing such information as your name and interests This information is packaged into a cookie and sent to your Web browser which stores it for later use The next time you go to the same Web site, your browser will send the cookie to the Web server The server can use this information to present you with custom Web pages So, for example, instead of seeing just a generic welcome page you might see a welcome page with your name on it
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cookies
A cookie is a file sent to a web browser by a web server to record one's activities on a website For instance, when you buy items from a site and place them in a so-called virtual shopping cart, that information is stored in the cookie When the browser requests additional files, the cookie information is sent back to the server Cookies can remember other kinds of personal information --your password, so you don't have to re-enter it each time you visit the site; your preferences, so the next time you return to a site, you can be presented with customized information Some people regard cookies as an invasion of privacy; others think they are a harmless way to make websites more personal
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cookies
Persistent Client-State HTTP Cookies are files containing information about visitors to a web site (e g user name and preferences) This information is provided by the user during the first visit to a web server The server records this information in a text file and stores this file on the visitor's hard drive When the visitor accesses the same web site again the server looks for the cookie and configures itself based on the information provided
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cookies
A cookie is a text file placed on your hard drive by some Web pages that you visit The cookie allows the Webmaster to track your visits to their Website as well as correlate that information with other information such as the previous page you visited, your operating system, your browser plus any information that you volunteer via a form When you return to that Website the site will retrieve your cookie file from your hard drive and use whatever information is stored to target content and advertising to both your stated preferences (where asked) and the behavior that you exhibited It is this technology that allows you to store items in an electronic shopping basket and "remember" other useful pieces of information such as passwords
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cookies
A means by which, under the HTTP protocol, a server or a script can maintain state or status information on the client workstation In other words, a cookie is bits of information about a person's visit to a Web page A cookie can include such information as the way a Web page was customized or how a visitor shopped on a Web site, or it can be used to track repeat visits
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cookies
Cookies are almost invisible packets of information stored on your computer These packets save information that allow you to visit particular web sites faster Passwords, preferences and personal information are stored in these cookies and sent from your computer to the particular web site to save you from having to log on and fill out a bunch of information every time you visit a particular site It's like Norm walking into Cheers without having to be reintroduced to the bar patrons every time
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cookies
Persistent Client-State HTTP Cookies are files containing information about visitors to a web site (e g , user name and preferences) This information is provided by the visitor during the first visit to a Web server The server records this information in a text file and stores this file on the visitor's hard drive When the visitor accesses the same web site again, the server looks for the cookie and configures itself based on the information provided
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cookies
Small files that are automatically downloaded from a Web server to the hard drive of someone browsing a Web site Information stored in cookies can then be accessed any time that computer returns to the site Cookies allow Web sites to "personalize" their appearance by identifying visitors, storing passwords, tracking preferences, and other possibilities
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cookies
These little guys are used to store information on your computer Cookies provide Website customization features Some later browser versions allow you to know in advance that a cookie is coming your way in which case you may decide you do or do not want to accept the cookie
ts
123
cookies
A cookie is a small piece of information When visiting someweb sites a small packet of data, or cookie, is stored on your harddisk and accessed by the web server every time you move around thesite This allows the site to record information about the qualityof navigation as well as user habits and interests
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124
cookies
A cookie is a piece of information stored on a user's hard disk which is attributed when they visit a specific site It is a text file, not a program A site can only read the information in a cookie which was written by that site The information that can be stored in a cookie consists of the date and time of the visit and any information given whilst on the site A cookie can be created, for example, when shopping on a web site and accessed by the site if the user visits again
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cooking
the act of preparing something (as food) by the application of heat; "cooking can be a great art"; "people are needed who have experience in cookery"; "he left the preparation of meals to his wife
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126
cooking
Cooking ingredients or equipment are used in cookery. Finely slice the cooking apples. cooking pots. see also cook. suitable for or used in cooking
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127
cooking
act of preparing food with heat isim
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128
cooking
Cooking is food which has been cooked. The menu is based on classic French cooking
Some etymologies, pronunciations, function and usage date content for the English translation portion are from Merriam-Webster Online at www.Merriam-Webster.com. Thanks to Online Yunanca Dil Eğitimi for providing some parts of online greek dictionary. To contribute more resources please contact us. Visuals(images) are provided by Google Image Search API. Some parts of the dictionary is contributed by many users, thank you! The content on this site is for informational purposes only. Bu aramada cook kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. cook kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan cook kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.