cooked
adjective
- having applied, or been affected by, heat thoroughly or completely (especially, but not limited to, preparing food)
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /kʊkt/
adj
Etymology: From the past tense of the verb cook.
- Prepared by cooking.
- Corrupted by conversion through a text format, requiring uncooking to be properly listenable.
“Select this button only if you’re 200 percent sure that the files are cooked and that you want to overwrite the originals with the uncooked versions.”
“Another cause of poor MP3 playback—especially when the sound is “gurgly”—is a “cooked” file. This means that at some point, the MP3 file has been transferred over the Web as an ASCII text file rather than a binary file.”
- Partially or wholly fabricated, falsified.
“But the Commanding Officer obviously has no say whatever as to which place he is likely to go, and the result is that, as regards rent, the figures have had to be “cooked,” if I may use such an expression. The figures have had to be cooked.”
- Done in, exhausted, pooped.
- In trouble; in a hopeless situation.
“If they killed men as they did this fall the Allies would be cooked in another year. He said we were all cooked but we were all right as long as we did not know it. We were all cooked.”
“Everybody could see Hillary Clinton was cooked in Iowa.”
- Inebriated: drunk, high, or stoned.
- Hungover.
- Brain-damaged from drug use.
“Don't bother talking to that guy—he's cooked from all the coke he used to do.”
- Of a person: crazy, insane.
verb
Etymology: From the past tense of the verb cook.
- simple past and past participle of cook