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词汇 kook
释义

Definition of kook in English:

kook

noun kuːkkuk
North American informal
  • A mad or eccentric person.

    〈北美,非正式〉疯子;怪人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Back in the 1970s, its supporters were considered kooks and lunatics.
    • The kooks who said they were at war with their government are now completely silent now that a real tyrant is in power.
    • The articles on here are certainly interesting, but there seems to be an inordinate number of kooks contributing.
    • Along the way, she meets a cavalcade of kooks and strange creatures including Tweedledee and Tweedledum, the White Queen, the White Knight, Humpty Dumpty, and the Jabberwocky.
    • I worry just as much, however, about the kooks out there who think that now is the time to plant a bomb.
    • And it is presumably true by definition that ‘kooks’ will be excluded by a higher intellectual standards but why does a higher intellectual standard exclude right-wing kooks only?
    • The only people who cite the Columbia study are kooks and religious zealots.
    • ‘He seeks out kooks and spends money like a drunken sailor in port,’ said RNC spokesman Michael Collins, obviously not the son of a Navy man.
    • They think that ‘there are too many kooks out there.’
    • His popularity has plummeted over the last year as he's made one rightward lurch after another in order to appeal to the misanthropic kooks who hold sway in the GOP presidential primaries.
    • You will even meet a lot of kooks who will tell you things like ‘your dog got hit by a car because God is punishing you for being an unwed teenage mother.’
    • Neither of them are kooks, they've simply been lied to by the people who are in charge.
    • It's better to be able to figure out who the kooks are by their own words, so that one may treat them with the cold contempt they deserve.
    • That's one nice thing about kooks - just when you think you couldn't expect them to get any dumber, one of them comes up with something utterly flabbergasting.
    • I won't reveal more, but the conclusion unwittingly undermines its support for the cause by making activists and supporters look like uncompassionate, extremist kooks.
    • It's a site dedicated to ‘cranks, crackpots, kooks, and loons on the Web.’
    • We can't trust those religious kooks to be fair minded, you know.
    • They may become obsessed or enraptured, but also inevitably enraged because as their vision begins to grow, so does the rumor that they are simply deluded kooks that will never actually get it off the ground.
    • The holistic view of healthy living is now normal, no longer the territory of Birkenstock-wearing kooks and foreigners.
    • He always seemed to be the one more into creating dance music, while Hyde and Smith were the experimental, progressive kooks, but that isn't the case here.
    Synonyms
    eccentric, oddity, odd fellow, unorthodox person, individualist, nonconformist, free spirit, bohemian, maverick, deviant, pervert, misfit, hippy, dropout

Origin

1960s: probably from cuckoo.

  • cuckoo from Middle English:

    The cuckoo is one of those birds whose name echoes the sound of its distinctive call—other examples are curlew (Late Middle English), hoopoe (mid 17th century), kittiwake (mid 17th century), and peewit [E16th]. You can describe an unwelcome intruder in a place or situation as a cuckoo in the nest. This comes from the cuckoo's habit of laying her eggs to be raised in another bird's nest. Cuckold (Old English), referring to the husband of an unfaithful wife, also derives from cucu, and plays on the same cuckoo-in-the-nest idea, although it is not actually the husband who is being the ‘cuckoo’. The reason that a silly or mad person is described as a cuckoo, or is said to have gone cuckoo, is probably that the bird's monotonously repeated call suggests simple-mindedness. Kook, ‘an eccentric person’, is short for cuckoo. It was first recorded in the 1920s but only really became common in the late 1950s. See also cloud, coccyx

Rhymes

archduke, chibouk, duke, Farouk, fluke, Luke, nuke, peruke, puke, rebuke, Seljuk, snook, souk, spruik, stook, tuque, zouk

Definition of kook in US English:

kook

nounkukko͞ok
North American informal
  • A crazy or eccentric person.

    〈北美,非正式〉疯子;怪人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Neither of them are kooks, they've simply been lied to by the people who are in charge.
    • I worry just as much, however, about the kooks out there who think that now is the time to plant a bomb.
    • Back in the 1970s, its supporters were considered kooks and lunatics.
    • Along the way, she meets a cavalcade of kooks and strange creatures including Tweedledee and Tweedledum, the White Queen, the White Knight, Humpty Dumpty, and the Jabberwocky.
    • The articles on here are certainly interesting, but there seems to be an inordinate number of kooks contributing.
    • It's better to be able to figure out who the kooks are by their own words, so that one may treat them with the cold contempt they deserve.
    • We can't trust those religious kooks to be fair minded, you know.
    • They think that ‘there are too many kooks out there.’
    • That's one nice thing about kooks - just when you think you couldn't expect them to get any dumber, one of them comes up with something utterly flabbergasting.
    • ‘He seeks out kooks and spends money like a drunken sailor in port,’ said RNC spokesman Michael Collins, obviously not the son of a Navy man.
    • His popularity has plummeted over the last year as he's made one rightward lurch after another in order to appeal to the misanthropic kooks who hold sway in the GOP presidential primaries.
    • The kooks who said they were at war with their government are now completely silent now that a real tyrant is in power.
    • It's a site dedicated to ‘cranks, crackpots, kooks, and loons on the Web.’
    • You will even meet a lot of kooks who will tell you things like ‘your dog got hit by a car because God is punishing you for being an unwed teenage mother.’
    • They may become obsessed or enraptured, but also inevitably enraged because as their vision begins to grow, so does the rumor that they are simply deluded kooks that will never actually get it off the ground.
    • He always seemed to be the one more into creating dance music, while Hyde and Smith were the experimental, progressive kooks, but that isn't the case here.
    • The holistic view of healthy living is now normal, no longer the territory of Birkenstock-wearing kooks and foreigners.
    • And it is presumably true by definition that ‘kooks’ will be excluded by a higher intellectual standards but why does a higher intellectual standard exclude right-wing kooks only?
    • I won't reveal more, but the conclusion unwittingly undermines its support for the cause by making activists and supporters look like uncompassionate, extremist kooks.
    • The only people who cite the Columbia study are kooks and religious zealots.
    Synonyms
    eccentric, oddity, odd fellow, unorthodox person, individualist, nonconformist, free spirit, bohemian, maverick, deviant, pervert, misfit, hippy, dropout

Origin

1960s: probably from cuckoo.

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