cookie
nounEtymology
Etymology tree Proto-Germanic *kōkô Old Dutch *kuoko Middle Dutch coeke Dutch koek Proto-Germanic *-ukaz Proto-West Germanic *-uk Proto-Germanic *-īną Proto-West Germanic *-īn ? Proto-West Germanic *-ukīn Old Dutch -kīn Middle Dutch -kijn Dutch -tjen Dutch -je Dutch koekiebor. English cookie Borrowed from Dutch koekie, dialectal diminutive of koek (“cake”), from Proto-Germanic *kōkô (compare German Low German Kookje (“biscuit, cookie, cracker”), Low German Kook (“cake”), German Kuchen (“cake”)). More at cake. Not related to English cook. The computing senses derive from magic cookie.
Definitions
A small, flat, baked good which is either crisp or soft but firm.
A sweet baked good (as in the previous sense) usually having chocolate chips, fruit,…
A sweet baked good (as in the previous sense) usually having chocolate chips, fruit, nuts, etc. baked into it.
A bun.
›+ 13 more definitionsshow fewer
An HTTP cookie.
A magic cookie.
An attractive young woman.
The vulva.
- a little girl was eating a cookie and spitting. “Do you have hair on your cookie?” “Don't be silly. I'm only eleven.”
- Her legs hung over the edge and the large towel covered just enough of her lap to hide her 'cookie'.
- If she wanted to compete in this dog-eat-pussy world, she had to keep up her personal grooming, even if it meant spreading her legs and letting some Vietnamese woman rip the hair off her cookie every other week.
The anus of a man.
A piece of crack cocaine, larger than a rock, and often in the shape of a cookie.
One's eaten food (e.g. lunch, etc.), especially one's stomach contents.
- I lost my cookies after that roller coaster ride.
- I feel sick, like I'm about to toss my cookies.
Clipping of fortune cookie.
A doughnut
A doughnut; a peel-out or skid mark in the shape of a circle.
To send a cookie to (a user, computer, etc.).
- We have already discussed the benefits — even the necessity — of cookieing visitors so that we can track their return visits to our Website.
- At Oracle, they cookie you before and after you register.
Affectionate name for a cook.
- More than a little apprehensive myself, I went out to the kitchen. Cookie, deep in a murder story, rocked peacefully beside the glowing range.
- "You must show cookie here how grateful you are for all the trouble she's taken." The boy didn't move. "Go on, get on with it," the Trunchbull said. "Cut a slice and taste it. We haven't got all day."
A cucoloris.
An endearing or condescending nickname.
- Anyway, I went into the house and before I could get passed the bedroom, he called me. I hated him for calling me. He would say, “Come here, Cookie,” and for some reason, I was stupid and scared and I listened to this man.
- Fry: Robot Devil? I get your hands? Zam! Robot Devil: Oh, what an appallingly ironic outcome. Bender: It's not ironic, it's just coincidental. Now fork over those lady-fingers, Cookie!
The neighborhood
Derived
ally cookie, bar cookie, brookie, Catherine wheel cookie, chookie, cookie butter, cookie cutter, cookie-cutter, cookie cutterish, cookie-cutterish, cookie dough, cookie exchange, cookie grabber, cookie hole, cookieholic, cookieish, cookie jar, cookie-jar accounting, cookie-jar reserve, cookieless, cookie licking, cookielike, cookie pop, cookie-pop, cookie press, cookie pusher, cookie sandwich, cookie sheet, cookie-shine, cookie stealer, cookie swap, cookie wall, credit cookie, crookie, eat cookie, Empire cookie, evercookie, fingers in the cookie jar, good cookie, Imperial cookie · +20 more
Vish — recursive loop
A definitional loop anchored at cookie. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.
A definitional loop anchored at cookie. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.
8 hops · closes at cookie
curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA