Concoct
71cook — [OE] The noun cook is a lot more ancient than the verb, which in English was a 14thcentury development from the noun. The noun itself was borrowed in Old English times from Vulgar Latin cōcus, a descendant of classical Latin coquus. This is of… …
72concoction — 1530s, digestion, from L. concoctionem (nom. concoctio) digestion, noun of action from pp. stem of concoquere (see CONCOCT (Cf. concoct)). Meaning preparation of a medicinal potion is from 1851; sense of a made up story is from 1823 …
73form — 1. noun 1) the general form of the landscape form is less important than content Syn: shape, configuration, formation, structure, construction, arrangement, appearance, exterior, outline, format, layout, design 2) the …
74make up — 1) let s kiss and make up Syn: be friends again, bury the hatchet, declare a truce, make peace, forgive and forget, shake hands, become reconciled, settle one s differences, mend fences, call it quits 2) exports make up 42% of earnings Syn …
75fabricate — v 1. construct, build, frame, fashion, figure; manufacture, produce, put out, make. 2. assemble, set up, compose, compile; erect, elevate, raise, put up, rear. 3. devise, formulate, design, mint, coin, hatch; invent, make up, think up; create,… …
76ὀξυπαροπτᾶ — ὀξυπαροπτάω concoct too fast pres subj act 1st sg (doric aeolic) ὀξυπαροπτάω concoct too fast pres ind act 1st sg (doric aeolic) …
77brew — [n] concoction beverage, blend, broth, compound, distillation, drink, fermentation, hash, hodgepodge*, infusion, instillation, liquor, melange, miscellany, mishmash*, mixture, potpourri, preparation; concepts 260,454,457 brew [v1] prepare by… …
78contrive — [v1] invent, design come up with, concoct, construct, cook up, create, devise, dream up*, engineer, fabricate, fashion, forge, form, formulate, frame*, handle, hatch, improvise, make, make up*, manipulate, manufacture, move, plan, plot, project,… …
79fabricate — [v1] manufacture assemble, brainstorm, build, cobble up*, compose, concoct, construct, contrive, cook up*, create, devise, dream up, erect, fashion, fit together, form, formulate, frame, head trip*, invent, join, knock together*, make, make up,… …
80cook — [OE] The noun cook is a lot more ancient than the verb, which in English was a 14thcentury development from the noun. The noun itself was borrowed in Old English times from Vulgar Latin cōcus, a descendant of classical Latin coquus. This is of… …