English

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Clipping of token.

Noun

edit

toke (plural tokes)

  1. (US, slang, casinos) A gratuity.
    I gave the maitre d’ a $10 toke and he just laughed.

Verb

edit

toke (third-person singular simple present tokes, present participle toking, simple past and past participle toked)

  1. (transitive, US casino slang) To give a gratuity to.
    You have to toke the maitre d’ at least $50 if you want a really good table.

Etymology 2

edit

Presumably borrowed from Spanish toque (literally touch). Noun sense 1968, verb 1952.[1]

Noun

edit

toke (plural tokes)

  1. (slang) A puff of marijuana.
    The artist took a thoughtful toke off the joint, then passed it along.
  2. (slang, by extension) An inhalation or lungful of anything.
    • 2011, Tim Winton, Dirt Music:
      Back on the wards a big toke of O2 might have done the job; it was God's own pick-me-up.

Verb

edit

toke (third-person singular simple present tokes, present participle toking, simple past and past participle toked)

  1. (slang) To smoke marijuana.
    Let's roll up a doobie and toke.
    • 2009 August 23, Walter Kirn, “Drugs to Do, Cases to Solve”, in New York Times[1]:
      This keeps Doc’s workload relatively light, freeing him to stay stoned around the clock and live in the now, which isn’t hard for him, because he’s toked away his short-term memory.
  2. (slang) To inhale a puff of marijuana
Derived terms
edit

Etymology 3

edit

Noun

edit

toke (plural tokes)

  1. (slang, obsolete) A piece of bread.
    • 1905, H. G. Wells, Kipps: The Story of a Simple Soul:
      Toke and cold ground rice pudding with plums it used to be—there is no better food at all.

References

edit
  1. ^ Douglas Harper (2001–2026), “toke”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.

Anagrams

edit

Japanese

edit

Romanization

edit

toke

  1. Rōmaji transcription of とけ

Lindu

edit

Noun

edit

toke

  1. chameleon

Māori

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Etymology 1

edit

From Proto-Polynesian *toke (compare with hōtoke, Hawaiian koʻekoʻe, Tahitian toʻetoʻe).[1]

Noun

edit

toke

  1. (obsolete) cold
edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Ross Clark and Simon J. Greenhill, editors (2011), “toke.2”, in “POLLEX-Online: The Polynesian Lexicon Project Online”, in Oceanic Linguistics, volume 50, number 2, pages 551–9

Etymology 2

edit

Noun

edit

toke

  1. worm
Synonyms
edit

Further reading

edit
  • John C. Moorfield (2011), “toke”, in Te Aka: Māori–English, English–Māori Dictionary and Index[2], 3rd edition, Longman/Pearson Education New Zealand, →ISBN

Middle English

edit

Verb

edit

toke

  1. first/third-person singular past indicative of taken; took