The difference between Cook and Cook off

When used as verbs, cook means to prepare (food) for eating by heating it, often by combining it with other ingredients, whereas cook off means to pull the pin from a grenade and wait two or three seconds before throwing.


Cook is also noun with the meaning: a person who prepares food for a living.

check bellow for the other definitions of Cook and Cook off

  1. Cook as a noun (cooking):

    A person who prepares food for a living.

  2. Cook as a noun (cooking):

    The head cook of a manor house

  3. Cook as a noun (slang):

    One who manufactures certain illegal drugs, especially meth.

    Examples:

    "Police found two meth cooks working in the illicit lab."

  4. Cook as a noun (slang):

    A session of manufacturing certain illegal drugs, especially meth.

  5. Cook as a noun:

    A fish, the European striped wrasse, .

  1. Cook as a verb (transitive):

    To prepare (food) for eating by heating it, often by combining it with other ingredients.

    Examples:

    "I'm cooking bangers and mash."

  2. Cook as a verb (intransitive):

    To prepare (unspecified) food for eating by heating it, often by combining it with other ingredients.

    Examples:

    "He's in the kitchen, cooking."

  3. Cook as a verb (intransitive):

    To be being cooked.

    Examples:

    "The dinner is cooking on the stove."

  4. Cook as a verb (intransitive, figuratively):

    To be uncomfortably hot.

    Examples:

    "Look at that poor dog shut up in that car on a day like today - it must be cooking in there."

  5. Cook as a verb (slang):

    To execute by electric chair.

  6. Cook as a verb (transitive, slang):

    To hold onto (a grenade) briefly after igniting the fuse, so that it explodes almost immediately after being thrown.

    Examples:

    "I always cook my [[frag]]s, in case they try to grab one and throw it back."

  7. Cook as a verb:

    To concoct or prepare.

  8. Cook as a verb:

    To tamper with or alter; to cook up.

  9. Cook as a verb (intransitive, jazz, slang):

    To play or improvise in an inspired and rhythmically exciting way. (From 1930s jive talk.)

    Examples:

    "Watch this band: they cook!"

    "Crank up the Coltrane and start cooking!"

  10. Cook as a verb (intransitive, idiomatic, music, slang):

    To play music vigorously.

    Examples:

    "On the Wagner piece, the orchestra was cooking!"

  1. Cook as a verb (obsolete, rare, intransitive):

    To make the noise of the cuckoo.

  1. Cook as a verb (UK, dialect, obsolete):

    To throw.

  1. Cook off as a verb (transitive, US, military):

    To pull the pin from a grenade and wait two or three seconds before throwing.

  2. Cook off as a verb (transitive, US, military):

    As with above, except to unintentionally wait so long that the grenade detonates.

  3. Cook off as a verb (transitive, chemistry, military):

    To cause an accidental detonation of explosives, especially due to excess heat.

  4. Cook off as a verb (intransitive, chemistry, military):

    To accidentally detonate, especially as the result of excess heat.