puck
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++puck /pʌk/ noun [countable]
DSOa hard flat circular piece of rubber that you hit with the stick in the game of ice hockey 冰球〔冰球运动中当球用的橡皮圆盘〕 →5 see picture at 见图 sport1
Examples from the Corpus
puck• FoxTrax attempts to solve this problem with a puck stuffed with circuit boards and infrared emitters.• Hockey pucks tangled up in blue.• There was a loose puck in front of the net.• Now and then when some one chased a misfired puck, one of them would skate over and ask what was going on.• I would have kept that puck.• He passed the guy the puck.• It showed the puck crossing the goal line at 19: 59. 9.• Potomski picked up the puck in the right circle, spun and fired a no-look shot past goalie Wade Flaherty.nPuck na character who enjoys playing tricks on people in the play A Midsummer Night's Dream by William shakespeare → see also puckishOrigin puck (1800-1900) English dialect puck “to hit”, from POKE1hard a Corpus of circular hit that rubber you piece flat
puck
puck /pʌk/
noun [countable]
a hard flat circular piece of rubber that you hit with the stick in the game of ice hockey
puck /pʌk/
noun [countable]
a hard flat circular piece of rubber that you hit with the stick in the game of ice hockey
Puck
Puck

a character who enjoys playing tricks on people in the play A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare ⇨ puckish
Puck, Wolf‧gang /ˈwʊlfɡæŋ/

(1949–) a US chef, born in Austria, who has influenced modern restaurant cooking and who owns several restaurants
| I |

a character who enjoys playing tricks on people in the play A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare ⇨ puckish
| II |

(1949–) a US chef, born in Austria, who has influenced modern restaurant cooking and who owns several restaurants
