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stoke
1[stohk]
verb (used with object)
to poke, stir up, and feed (a fire).
to tend the fire of (a furnace, especially one used with a boiler to generate steam for an engine); supply with fuel.
verb (used without object)
to shake up the coals of a fire.
to tend a fire or furnace.
stoke
2[stohk]
noun
a unit of kinematic viscosity, equal to the viscosity of a fluid in poises divided by the density of the fluid in grams per cubic centimeter.
stoke
/ stəʊk /
verb
to feed, stir, and tend (a fire, furnace, etc)
(tr) to tend the furnace of; act as a stoker for
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of stoke1
Example Sentences
His characterization of China’s refusal to buy American soybeans as an “economically hostile act,” meanwhile, blunted the impact of dovish remarks from Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell that stoked bets on more central-bank rate cuts.
Yet, for more than a hundred years, most football kits failed to stoke the imagination at all.
While higher pay would be good for workers, it could also stoke inflation.
A big increase in China tariffs, meanwhile, could stoke inflation pressures and challenge the market’s assumptions on Federal Reserve rate cuts, a key plank in the market’s bullish outlook.
It’ll endanger Americans, baselessly stoke mistrust in one of the future’s most important health technologies and accelerate the offshoring of American biotech jobs that are critical for our national security.
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