Stoked on
stoked on
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- Stokehold
noun 1. Also, stokehold [stohk-hohld] /ˈstoʊkˌhoʊld/ (Show IPA). fireroom. 2. a hole in a furnace through which the fire is stoked. noun, Nautical. 1. a chamber in which the boilers of a steam vessel are fired. noun (nautical) 1. a coal bunker for a ship’s furnace 2. the hold for a ship’s boilers; fire room […]
- Stokehole
noun 1. Also, stokehold [stohk-hohld] /ˈstoʊkˌhoʊld/ (Show IPA). fireroom. 2. a hole in a furnace through which the fire is stoked. noun 1. another word for stokehold 2. a hole in a furnace through which it is stoked
- Stokely carmichael
noun 1. Hoagland Howard [hohg-luh nd] /ˈhoʊg lənd/ (Show IPA), (“Hoagy”) 1899–1981, U.S. songwriter and musician. 2. Stokely [stohk-lee] /ˈstoʊk li/ (Show IPA), (Kwame Ture) 1941–1998, U.S. civil-rights leader, born in Trinidad: chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee 1966–67. 3. a town in central California, near Sacramento. noun 1. Hoaglund Howard (ˈhəʊɡlənd), known as […]
- Stoke-on-Trent
or Stoke-upon-Trent [stohk-on-trent, -awn-] /ˈstoʊk ɒnˈtrɛnt, -ɔn-/ noun 1. a city in N Staffordshire, in central England, on the Trent River: pottery and china. Stoke-on-Trent noun 1. a city in central England, in Stoke-on-Trent unitary authority, Staffordshire on the River Trent: a centre of the pottery industry; university (1992). Pop: 259 252 (2001) 2. a […]
- Stoke-poges
noun 1. a village in S Buckinghamshire, in S England, W of London: the churchyard here is believed to be the setting of Gray’s Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard.