concoct: [16] To concoct an excuse is the same, etymologically, as to ‘cook’ one up. The word concoct comes from the past participle of Latin concoquere, a compound verb formed from the prefix com- ‘together’ and coquere ‘cook’. This was a derivative of the noun coquus ‘cook’, which was the source of English cook. The Latin verb developed several figurative senses, including ‘digest food’ and ‘reflect on something in the mind’, but ‘fabricate’ seems to be an English creation (first recorded in the late 18th century), developed from an earlier ‘make by mixing ingredients’. => cook
concoct (v.)
1530s, "to digest," from Latin concoctus, past participle of concoquere "to digest; to boil together, prepare; to consider well," from com- "together" (see com-) + coquere "to cook" (see cook (n.)). Meaning "to prepare an edible thing" is from 1670s. First expanded metaphorically beyond cooking 1792. Related: Concocted; concocting.
雙語例句
1. I gave her a tip on how to concoct a new kind of soup.
我教她配製一種新湯的訣竅.
來自辭典例句
2. And they had taken me so long to concoct.
我花了好長時間編造這些謊言.
來自互聯網
3. How did the inventive chef ever concoct such strange dish?
怎麽發明的廚師都編造這種奇怪的菜?
來自互聯網
4. It was the least controversial, most insipid topic I could concoct.