Chocolate-chipcookies . Softcookies which do not have chips, fruit or nuts in them. Layered chocolatecookies . Borrowed fromDutch koekie , dialectal diminutive ofkoek ( “ cake ” ) , fromProto-Germanic *kōkô (compareGerman Low German Kookje ( “ biscuit, cookie, cracker ” ) ,Low German Kook ( “ cake ” ) ,German Kuchen ( “ cake ” ) ). More atcake . Not related toEnglish cook .
The computing senses derive frommagic cookie .
cookie (plural cookies )
( Canada ,US , Philippines ) A small, flat, baked good which is either crisp or soft but firm.Synonyms: biscuit ,( UK, Australia ) bickie ( UK , Commonwealth ) A sweet baked good (as in the previous sense) usually having chocolate chips, fruit, nuts, etc. baked into it.( Scotland ) Abun .( computing , Internet , by ellipsis ) AnHTTP cookie .( computing , by ellipsis ) Amagic cookie .( slang , dated ) An attractive young woman.( slang , vulgar ) Thevulva .1968 , Gershon Legman, quoting anonymous informant from New York, 1953,Rationale of the Dirty Joke [1] , page100 :a little girl was eating a cookie and spitting. “Do you have hair on yourcookie ?” “Don't be silly. I'm only eleven.”
2009 , T. R. Oulds,Story of Many Secret Night [2] , Lulu.com, published2010 ,→ISBN :Her legs hung over the edge and the large towel covered just enough of her lap to hide her 'cookie' .
2010 , Lennie Ross,Blow me , Lulu.com, published2010 ,→ISBN ,page47 :If she wanted to compete in this dog-eat-pussy world, she had to keep up her personal grooming, even if it meant spreading her legs and letting some Vietnamese woman rip the hair off hercookie every other week.
2014 ,Nicki Minaj , "Anaconda " (Clean Version),The Pinkprint :Cookie put his butt to sleep, now he callin' me Nyquil.( slang , drugs) A piece ofcrack cocaine , larger than arock , and often in the shape of a cookie.( informal , in theplural ) One's eaten food (e.g. lunch, etc.), especially one's stomach contents.I lost mycookies after that roller coaster ride.
( informal ) Clipping offortune cookie .( Northern US ) Adoughnut ; a peel-out orskid mark in the shape of a circle.In North America, abiscuit is a small, soft baked bread similar to ascone but not sweet. In some cases, it can be hard (seedog biscuit ). In the United Kingdom, abiscuit is a small, crisp or firm, sweet baked good — the sort of thing which in North America is called acookie . (Less frequently, British speakers refer tocrackers asbiscuits .) In North America, even small, layered baked sweets likeOreos are referred to ascookies , while in the UK, typically only thosebiscuits which have chocolate chips, nuts, fruit, or other things baked into them are also calledcookies . Throughout the English-speaking world, thin, crispy, salty or savoury baked breads likein this image (saltine crackers) are calledcrackers , while thin, crispy, sweet baked goods likein this image (Nilla Wafers) andthis image (wafer sticks) arewafers . Both the US and the UK distinguishcrackers ,wafers andcookies /biscuits fromcakes : the former are generally hard or crisp and become soft whenstale , while the latter is generally soft or moist and becomes hard when stale. gastronomy: Hyponyms ofcookie (noun)
computing, Internet: Hyponyms ofcookie (noun)
small, flat baked good
—see also biscuit Afrikaans:koekie Albanian:biskotë (sq) f ,galetë (sq) f Amharic:ብስኩት ( bəskut ) Arabic:كُعَيْكَة f ( kuʕayka ) ,كُوكِي m ( kūkī ) ,بَسْكَوِيت (ar) m ( baskawīt ) Moroccan Arabic:بقْسْوي m ( bəqswi ) Armenian:թխվածք (hy) ( tʻxvackʻ ) ,պեչենի ( pečʻeni ) Azerbaijani:külçə ,biskvit ,kökə Basque:gaileta ,biskotxa Belarusian:пе́чыва n ( pjéčyva ) ,пячэ́нне n ( pjačénnje ) Bengali:মিষ্ট রূটি ( miśṭo ruṭi ) ,বিস্কুট (bn) ( biskuṭ ) Breton:gwispidenn (br) Bulgarian:бискви́та (bg) f ( biskvíta ) ,кураби́я f ( kurabíja ) ,суха́р (bg) m ( suhár ) Burmese:ဘီစကွတ် (my) ( bhica.kwat ) ,ဆိတ်နို့မုန့် (my) ( hcitnui.mun. ) Catalan:galeta (ca) f ,bescuit (ca) m ,pasta de te f Chinese:Cantonese:曲奇 (yue) ( kuk1 kei4 ) ,曲奇餅 / 曲奇饼 ( kuk1 kei4 beng2 ) ,餅乾 / 饼干 ( beng2 gon1 ) Mandarin:餅乾 / 饼干 (zh) ( bǐnggān ) ,曲奇 (zh) ( qūqí ) ( mainland China ) ,曲奇餅 / 曲奇饼 (zh) ( qūqíbǐng ) ( mainland China ) Cornish:tesen gales f Czech:sušenka (cs) f Danish:småkage (da) c ,kiks (da) c Dutch:koekje (nl) Esperanto:biskvito Estonian:küpsis (et) ,kook (et) ,biskviit Finnish:keksi (fi) ,pikkuleipä (fi) French:biscuit (fr) m Galician:galleta (gl) f ,pasta (gl) f Georgian:ორცხობილა ( orcxobila ) German:Keks (de) m ,Plätzchen (de) n Greek:μπισκότο (el) n ( biskóto ) ,βούτημα (el) n ( voútima ) Ancient:κόλλιξ m ( kóllix ) Gujarati:કૂકી ( kūkī ) Hausa:fànkee ,bìskît Hebrew:עוּגִיָּה / עוגייה (he) f ( ugi'a ) ,בִּיסְקְוִיט / ביסקוויט (he) m ( bískvit ) Hindi:कुकी ( kukī ) ,बिस्कुट (hi) m ( biskuṭ ) Hungarian:sütemény (hu) ,süti (hu) ,aprósütemény (hu) ,teasütemény (hu) Hunsrik:Bolasch f Icelandic:kex (is) n ,smákaka f Ido:bisquito (io) Indonesian:biskuit (id) ,kukis Italian:biscotto (it) m Japanese:クッキー (ja) ( kukkī ) ,ビスケット (ja) ( bisuketto ) Kannada:ಕುಕಿ ( kuki ) Kazakh:печенье ( peçene ) Khmer:ខូគី ( khoukii ) Korean:쿠키 (ko) ( kuki ) ,비스켓 ( biseuket ) ,비스킷 ( biseukit ) Kyrgyz:печенье (ky) ( pecenye ) Lao:ຂະຫນົມປັງ ( kha nom pang ) Latin:crustulum n ,copta f Latvian:cepums m ,biskvīts m Ligurian:beschéutto m Lithuanian:sausainis (lt) m ,biskvitas m Macedonian:колач m ( kolač ) ,кекс m ( keks ) ,бискви́т m ( biskvít ) Malay:kuih (ms) Malayalam:ബിസ്കറ്റ് ( biskaṟṟŭ ) Maltese:gallettina f Mongolian:Cyrillic:жигнэмэг (mn) ( žignemeg ) ( official ) ,печень ( pečenʹ ) ( Mongolia, popular ) Mongolian:ᠵᠢᠩᠨᠡᠮᠡᠭ ( ǰingnemeg ) ,ᠫᠧᠴᠧᠨᠢ ( pēčēni ) Navajo:bááh łikaní Neapolitan:vascuotto m Norwegian:Bokmål:småkake m or f Persian:کلوچه (fa) ( koluče ) ,بیسکوئیت ( bisku'it ) ,کاک (fa) ( kâk ) ( archaic ) Polish:ciastko (pl) n ,ciasteczko (pl) n , ,herbatnik (pl) m Portuguese:biscoito (pt) m ,bolacha (pt) f Romanian:biscuit (ro) m Russian:пече́нье (ru) n ( pečénʹje ) Scottish Gaelic:briosgaid f Serbo-Croatian:Cyrillic:бѝсквӣт m ,ке̏кс m Roman:bìskvīt (sh) m ,kȅks (sh) m Slovak:sušienka f Slovene:piškot (sl) m Spanish:galleta (es) f Swahili:biskuti (sw) Swedish:kaka (sv) c ,småkaka (sv) c Tagalog:kuki Tajik:кулчақанд ( kulčaqand ) Telugu:కుకీ ( kukī ) Thai:คุกกี้ (th) ( kúk-gîi ) ,ขนมกินเล่น ,บิสกิต ( bís-gìt ) ,ขนมปัง (th) ( kà-nǒm-bpang ) Tibetan:ཁ་ཟས ( kha zas ) Turkish:kurabiye (tr) Turkmen:köke ,peçenýa Ukrainian:пе́чиво n ( péčyvo ) Uyghur:پېچىنە ( pëchine ) Uzbek:pechenʼye ,pechenye (uz) Vietnamese:bánh quy (vi) ,bích quy (vi) ,bánh bích quy Walloon:biscûte (wa) f Yiddish:קיכל n ( kikhl ) Zuni:mulochikwa
sweet baked good (as in the previous sense) which has chocolate chips, fruit, nuts etc. baked into it
( computing senses ) : breadcrumb ( element that helps to track things digitally ) cookie (third-person singular simple present cookies ,present participle cookieing or cookying ,simple past and past participle cookied )
( computing , transitive ) To send a cookie to (auser ,computer , etc.).2000 , Ralph Kimball, Richard Merz,The Data Webhouse Toolkit: Building the Web-Enabled Data Warehouse [3] :We have already discussed the benefits — even the necessity — ofcookieing visitors so that we can track their return visits to our Website.
2002 , Jim Sterne,Web Metrics: Proven Methods for Measuring Web Site Success [4] :At Oracle, theycookie you before and after you register.
Fromcook +-ie .
cookie (plural cookies )
( dated , colloquial ) Affectionate name for acook . 1954 ,Blackwood's Magazine , volumes275-276 , page340 :More than a little apprehensive myself, I went out to the kitchen.Cookie , deep in a murder story, rocked peacefully beside the glowing range.
1988 , Roald Dahl,Matilda :"You must showcookie here how grateful you are for all the trouble she's taken." The boy didn't move. "Go on, get on with it," the Trunchbull said. "Cut a slice and taste it. We haven't got all day."
Corruption ofcucoloris .
cookie (plural cookies )
( slang ) Acucoloris .Borrowed fromEnglish cookie .
cookie m (plural cookies )
( computing ) cookie FromEnglish cookie , in turn fromDutch koekje , of which it is adoublet .
IPA (key ) : /ˈkuki/ Hyphenation:coo‧kie cookie n (plural cookies ,diminutive cookietje n )
( computing ) cookie Borrowed fromEnglish cookie .
cookie m (plural cookies )
( France ) cookie ( American-style biscuit ) ( computing ) cookie Hyponyms: témoin de navigation ,témoin Unadapted borrowing fromEnglish cookie .
IPA (key ) : /ˈku.ki/ Rhymes:-uki Syllabification:coo‧kie cookie n (indeclinable )
( Internet ) cookie ,HTTP cookie ( packet of information sent by a server to browser ) Synonym: ciasteczko cookie in Polish dictionaries at PWNUnadapted borrowing fromEnglish cookie .
cookie ( Brazil ) m or( Portugal ) f (plural cookies )
( Internet , computing ) cookie ,HTTP cookie ( Brazil ) cookie ( American-style biscuit ) Unadapted borrowing fromEnglish cookie .
cookie m (plural cookies )
( Internet ) cookie ,HTTP cookie According toRoyal Spanish Academy (RAE) prescriptions, unadapted foreign words should be written in italics in a text printed in roman type, and vice versa, and in quotation marks in a manuscript text or when italics are not available. In practice, this RAE prescription is not always followed.