Associations to the word «Cookie»

Pictures for the word «Cookie»

Wiktionary

COOKIE, noun. (North America) A small, flat, baked good which is either crisp or soft but firm.
COOKIE, noun. (UK) A sweet baked good (as in the previous sense) which has chocolate chips, fruit, nuts, etc. baked into it.
COOKIE, noun. (Scotland) A bun.
COOKIE, noun. (computing) (browsers) An HTTP cookie, web cookie.
COOKIE, noun. (computing) A magic cookie.
COOKIE, noun. (dated) (possibly offensive) A young, attractive woman.
COOKIE, noun. (slang) (vulgar) The female genitalia.
COOKIE CUTTER, noun. (US) A device used to cut flattened dough into shapes before baking.
COOKIE CUTTERS, noun. Plural of cookie cutter
COOKIE DOUGH, noun. (countable) A paste usually formed of flour, sugar, water, eggs, and other ingredients which, when baked, hardens to form a cookie or a number of cookies.
COOKIE DOUGH, noun. (uncountable) A flavor designed to emulate the taste of the paste.
COOKIE DOUGHS, noun. Plural of cookie dough
COOKIE JAR, noun. A vessel for storing cookies or other food.
COOKIE JAR, noun. (Internet) The storage space for browser cookies.
COOKIE JARS, noun. Plural of cookie jar
COOKIE MONSTER, proper noun. A blue creature from the children's television show Sesame Street who is intensely fond of cookies.
COOKIE POP, noun. A confection consisting of a cookie stuck on a stick in the manner of a lollipop.
COOKIE SANDWICH, noun. A snack consisting of two cookies with a filling between them.
COOKIE SANDWICHES, noun. Plural of cookie sandwich
COOKIE SHEET, noun. (cooking) A wide, flat metal pan suitable for baking in an oven.
COOKIE SHEETS, noun. Plural of cookie sheet

Dictionary definition

COOKIE, noun. Any of various small flat sweet cakes (`biscuit' is the British term).
COOKIE, noun. The cook on a ranch or at a camp.
COOKIE, noun. A short line of text that a web site puts on your computer's hard drive when you access the web site.

Wise words

Men govern nothing with more difficulty than their tongues, and can moderate their desires more than their words.
Baruch Spinoza