bake
Americanverb (used with object)
-
to cook by dry heat in an oven or on heated metal or stones.
-
to harden by heat.
to bake pottery in a kiln.
-
to dry by, or subject to heat.
The sun baked the land.
verb (used without object)
-
to bake bread, a casserole, etc.
-
to become baked.
The cake will bake in about half an hour.
-
to be subjected to heat.
The lizard baked on the hot rocks.
noun
-
a social occasion at which the chief food is baked.
-
Scot. cracker.
verb phrase
verb
-
(tr) to cook by dry heat in or as if in an oven
-
(intr) to cook bread, pastry, etc, in an oven
-
to make or become hardened by heat
-
informal (intr) to be extremely hot, as in the heat of the sun
noun
-
a party at which the main dish is baked
-
a batch of things baked at one time
-
a kind of biscuit
-
a small flat fried cake
Other Word Forms
Derived Forms
-
prebakeverb
-
underbakeverb (used with object)
-
outbakeverb (used with object)
-
well-bakedadjective
-
rebakeverb (used with object)
-
unbakedadjective
-
overbakeverb
Conjugated Forms
Present
-
has bakedperfect 3rd person singular
-
have bakedperfect
-
am bakingprogressive 1st person singular
-
have been bakingperfect progressive
-
is bakingprogressive 3rd person singular
-
has been bakingperfect progressive 3rd person singular
-
bakessingular 3rd person
-
are bakingprogressive
-
bakingparticiple
Past
-
had bakedperfect
-
was bakingprogressive singular
-
were bakingprogressive plural
-
had been bakingperfect progressive
-
bakedsimple
-
bakedparticiple
Future
Etymology
Origin of bake
First recorded before 1000; Middle English baken, Old English bacan; cognate with Old High German bahhan, Old Norse baka; akin to Dutch bakken, German backen, Greek phṓgein “to roast”; from Proto-Indo-European extended root bhēg-, bhōg- “to warm, roast”
Explanation
To bake something is to cook it in a hot oven. When you bake a batch of blueberry muffins, your whole house smells delicious. Whether you bake some cookies for dessert, a casserole to take to a potluck supper, or bake a clay pot in a kiln, you cook with a relatively slow, dry heat. You can also use the word bake figuratively: "Are you going to move into the shade, or are you just going to bake in the sun all day?" The Old English word was bacan, from a Germanic root.
Vocabulary lists containing bake
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.