cock 1 (k k)n.1. a. An adult male chicken; a rooster. b. An adult male of various other birds. 2. A weathervane shaped like a rooster; a weathercock. 3. A leader or chief. 4. A faucet or valve by which the flow of a liquid or gas can be regulated. 5. a. The hammer of a firearm. b. The position of the hammer of a firearm when ready for firing. 6. A tilting or jaunty turn upward: the cock of a hat. 7. Vulgar Slang The penis. 8. Archaic The characteristic cry of a rooster early in the morning. v. cocked, cock·ing, cocks v.tr.1. To set the hammer of (a firearm) in a position ready for firing. 2. To set (a device, such as a camera shutter) in a position ready for use. 3. To tilt or turn up or to one side, usually in a jaunty or alert manner: cocked an eyebrow in response to a silly question. 4. To raise in preparation to throw or hit: cocked the bat before swinging at the pitch. v.intr.1. To set the hammer of a firearm in a position ready for firing. 2. To turn or stick up. 3. To strut; swagger. Idioms: cock a snoot/snook Slang To express scorn or derision by or as if by placing the thumb on the nose and wiggling the fingers; thumb one's nose: "[He] could cock a snoot at the rest of the . . . world and blithely go his own way" (Elie Kedourie). cock of the walk An overbearing or domineering person.
[Middle English cok, from Old English cocc, probably from Late Latin coccus, from coco, a cackling, of imitative origin.] |