choke
Americanverb (used with object)
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to stop the breath of by squeezing or obstructing the windpipe; strangle; stifle.
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to stop by or as if by strangling or stifling.
The sudden wind choked his words.
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to stop by filling; obstruct; clog.
Grease choked the drain.
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to suppress (a feeling, emotion, etc.) (often followed by back ordown ).
I managed to choke back my tears.
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to fill chock-full.
The storeroom was choked with furniture.
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to seize (a log, felled tree, etc.) with a chain, cable, or the like, so as to facilitate removal.
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to enrich the fuel mixture of (an internal-combustion engine) by diminishing the air supply to the carburetor.
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Sports. to grip (a bat, racket, or the like) farther than usual from the end of the handle; shorten one's grip on (often followed byup ).
verb (used without object)
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to suffer from or as from strangling or suffocating.
He choked on a piece of food.
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to become obstructed, clogged, or otherwise stopped.
The words choked in her throat.
noun
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the act or sound of choking.
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a mechanism by which the air supply to the carburetor of an internal-combustion engine can be diminished or stopped.
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Machinery. any mechanism that, by blocking a passage, regulates the flow of air, gas, etc.
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Electricity. choke coil.
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a narrowed part, as in a chokebore.
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the bristly upper portion of the receptacle of the artichoke.
verb phrase
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choke up
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to become or cause to become speechless, as from the effect of emotion or stress.
She choked up over the sadness of the tale.
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to become too tense or nervous to perform well.
Our team began to choke up in the last inning.
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choke off to stop or obstruct by or as by choking.
to choke off a nation's fuel supply.
verb
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(tr) to hinder or stop the breathing of (a person or animal), esp by constricting the windpipe or by asphyxiation
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(intr) to have trouble or fail in breathing, swallowing, or speaking
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(tr) to block or clog up (a passage, pipe, street, etc)
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(tr) to retard the growth or action of
the weeds are choking my plants
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(tr) to suppress (emotion)
she choked her anger
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slang (intr) to die
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(tr) to enrich the petrol-air mixture by reducing the air supply to (a carburettor, petrol engine, etc)
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(intr) (esp in sport) to be seized with tension and fail to perform well
noun
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the act or sound of choking
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a device in the carburettor of a petrol engine that enriches the petrol-air mixture by reducing the air supply
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any constriction or mechanism for reducing the flow of a fluid in a pipe, tube, etc
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Also called: choke coil. electronics an inductor having a relatively high impedance, used to prevent the passage of high frequencies or to smooth the output of a rectifier
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the inedible centre of the head of an artichoke
Other Word Forms
Etymology
Origin of choke
1150–1200; Middle English choken, cheken, variant of achoken, acheken, Old English ācēocian to suffocate; akin to Old Norse kōk gullet
Explanation
When you choke, you are suddenly unable to breathe, often because something is stuck in your throat. Your dad's rude joke might make you gasp and choke on your grilled cheese sandwich. You might choke in a smoky room, or choke on a grape that's lodged halfway down your throat. In either case, your body can't get enough oxygen. People also choke up with emotion, figuratively choking on their sobs. Likewise, a child might complain, "This scarf chokes me!" — it's uncomfortably tight, but he's not literally unable to breathe. When the weeds in your garden outnumber the vegetables, you can also say they choke, or crowd, your plants.
Vocabulary lists containing choke
Common Five-letter Words for Wordle, List 3
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This Week in Words: Current Events Vocab for January 22–January 28, 2022
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Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
“How long Hawaiians was waiting for Hawaiian Homes? Choke years,” the lifelong Lahaina resident said.
From Seattle Times • Sep. 30, 2023
Another game like this and Los Angeles will be a contender to steal Atlanta’s hard-earned designation as Choke City.
From Los Angeles Times • Oct. 21, 2021
Sian Beilock, president of Barnard College and the author of Choke, reveals the science of why we sometimes play our worst when it matters the most.
From Slate • Jan. 31, 2021
In January 2019, she wrote, “I noticed trouble swallowing. Choke easily. Can trip easily.”
From Washington Times • Mar. 8, 2020
And without the Choke smoke, you can actually see the sun rise stronger every day.
From "Red Queen" by Victoria Aveyard
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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.