English[edit]
- Chook, in Aussie lingo, means Chicken. We are chicken, delicious chicken cooked over our charcoal rotisserie. We're not just chicken. Veggies as the world intended, cooked over our charcoal grill, along with your soon to be favorite sides.
- Chook & Sosig: Walk The Plank Free Download PC Game pre-installed in direct link. Chook & Sosig: Walk The Plank Free Download For PC Preinstalled. Chook & Sosig: Walk the Plank is a mischievous, charming, and character-driven adventure. Along with a few friends, Chook & Sosig get creative while roleplaying as pirates.
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Etymology[edit]
Chook & Sosig: Walk The Plank 1 954
Ok lang maubos star ko sa ML, mapasaya ko lang kayo.
Trim enabler 3 6 3 download free. From Irish dialect chook('a call made to poultry or pigs'), from Irish tsiug, tsiuc 'call to chickens, chicken (child talk), sound made by chickens (= English buck buck buck).
Pronunciation[edit]
- IPA(key): /tʃʊk/
- Rhymes: -ʊk
Audio (AU)
Noun[edit]
chook (pluralchooks)
- (Australia,New Zealand,informal) A chicken, especially a hen.
- 2005, Don Burke, The Complete Burke′s Backyard: The Ultimate Book of Fact Sheets[1], page 683:
- Worm chickens once every three months and, if an occasional lice problem occurs, spray the inside of the chook shed with Coopex.
- 2006, Judith Brett, The Chook in the Australian Unconscious, in Peter Beilharz, Robert Manne, Reflected Light: La Trobe Essays, page 329,
- This little book, with its meticulous pencil drawings of chooks in mechanical contraptions and photos to show the machine in operation with a white leghorn called Gregory Peck, is evidence of both the sadism inspired by the chook′s comparatively flightless fate and the laughter we use to defend ourselves against the knowledge of that sadism.
- 2011, Helen Maczkowiack, An Awkward Fit[2], page 21:
- She decided to dig her way under the fence into their chook house and had great fun running around and biting the necks of about eight chooks and leaving them half-dead and bleeding. The neighbour was furious, and unfortunately it was Dad′s birthday, so when he arrived home from work, Mum said ‘Happy birthday and[sic] darling. Guess what? Your dog has half-killed most of the neighbour′s chooks.
- (Australia,New Zealand,informal) A cooked chicken; a chicken dressed for cooking.
- (Australia,dated) A fool.
Translations[edit]
|
Interjection[edit]
chook
- (Australia) A call made to chickens.
Derived terms[edit]
Anagrams[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=chook&oldid=57847124'
English[edit]
Etymology[edit]
From Irish dialect chook('a call made to poultry or pigs'), from Irish tsiug, tsiuc 'call to chickens, chicken (child talk), sound made by chickens (= English buck buck buck).
Chook & Sosig: Walk The Plank 1 955
Pronunciation[edit]
- IPA(key): /tʃʊk/
- Rhymes: -ʊk
Audio (AU)
Noun[edit]
chook (pluralchooks)
- (Australia,New Zealand,informal) A chicken, especially a hen.
- 2005, Don Burke, The Complete Burke′s Backyard: The Ultimate Book of Fact Sheets[1], page 683:
- Worm chickens once every three months and, if an occasional lice problem occurs, spray the inside of the chook shed with Coopex.
- 2006, Judith Brett, The Chook in the Australian Unconscious, in Peter Beilharz, Robert Manne, Reflected Light: La Trobe Essays, page 329,
- This little book, with its meticulous pencil drawings of chooks in mechanical contraptions and photos to show the machine in operation with a white leghorn called Gregory Peck, is evidence of both the sadism inspired by the chook′s comparatively flightless fate and the laughter we use to defend ourselves against the knowledge of that sadism.
- 2011, Helen Maczkowiack, An Awkward Fit[2], page 21:
- She decided to dig her way under the fence into their chook house and had great fun running around and biting the necks of about eight chooks and leaving them half-dead and bleeding. The neighbour was furious, and unfortunately it was Dad′s birthday, so when he arrived home from work, Mum said ‘Happy birthday and[sic] darling. Guess what? Your dog has half-killed most of the neighbour′s chooks.
- (Australia,New Zealand,informal) A cooked chicken; a chicken dressed for cooking.
- (Australia,dated) A fool.
Translations[edit]
|
Interjection[edit]
chook Omnifocus 2 0 2 – personal task manager.
- (Australia) A call made to chickens.
Derived terms[edit]
Anagrams[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=chook&oldid=57847124'