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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
concoct
verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
story
▪ Should she concoct some story about him having a violently contagious disease?
▪ The image of Citrona as fascinating and repellant at once seems to be what most interested Cruz in concocting this story.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Debbie started the business by concocting recipes in her kitchen.
▪ For the party, they had concocted a special cocktail containing, among other things, rum and vodka.
▪ Lawyers claim that she's a nut who's concocted a story of date rape.
▪ Whenever I had a cold, my grandmother would concoct a remedy out of herbs, ginger, lemons and garlic.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ But Merseyside and Manchester both proved last week that it is possible to concoct high drama without substituting motivation for mutilation.
▪ If visitors ask him how he concocted the maze, he tells them straight-faced that he relied upon GPSthe Global Positioning System.
▪ In medieval times, professional perfumers would concoct personal scents for their clients from six to eight special ingredients.
▪ Many thanks for concocting a circular for's Edinburgh week-end.
▪ Most of us were pie-eyed drunk from the boilermakers Doy had been concocting out of palm spirits and San Miguel.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Concoct

Concoct \Con*coct"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Concocted; p. pr. & vb. n. Concocting.] [L. concoctus, p. p. of concoquere to cook together, to digest, mature; con- + coquere to cook. See Cook.]

  1. To digest; to convert into nourishment by the organs of nutrition. [Obs.]

    Food is concocted, the heart beats, the blood circulates.
    --Cheyne.

  2. To purify or refine chemically. [Obs.]
    --Thomson.

  3. To prepare from crude materials, as food; to invent or prepare by combining different ingredients; as, to concoct a new dish or beverage.

  4. To digest in the mind; to devise; to make up; to contrive; to plan; to plot.

    He was a man of a feeble stomach, unable to concoct any great fortune.
    --Hayward.

  5. To mature or perfect; to ripen. [Obs.]
    --Bacon.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
concoct

1530s, "to digest," from Latin concoctus, past participle of concoquere "to digest; to boil together, prepare; to consider well," from com- "together" (see com-) + coquere "to cook" (see cook (n.)). Meaning "to prepare an edible thing" is from 1670s. First expanded metaphorically beyond cooking 1792. Related: Concocted; concocting.

Wiktionary
concoct

vb. 1 to prepare something by mixing various ingredients, especially to prepare food for cooking 2 to contrive something using skill or ingenuity

WordNet
concoct
  1. v. make a concoction (of) by mixing

  2. prepare or cook by mixing ingredients; "concoct a strange mixture" [syn: cook up]

  3. of charges [syn: trump up]

  4. devise or invent; "He thought up a plan to get rich quickly"; "no-one had ever thought of such a clever piece of software" [syn: think up, think of, dream up, hatch]

Usage examples of "concoct".

The papal palace at Avignon is accurately portrayed, except for the archives, which I concocted.

Sensing the danger early in their relationship, Alejandro had concocted a tale of modest roots and a conflict between the gentle breeding of his mother and the barefisted call of his soldiering father.

Paul Crouch had something to do with tobacco promoting Formula One cars and Ronny Raul was a food scientist at US Abstract Foods Corporation on the Banbury ring road, whose factory would fill the air for miles around with the smell of whatever they were concocting that day, nutmeg and cinnamon, coffee and cardamon, saffron and chocolate, the smells of the Damascus souk amongst the tilting roadsigns and squashed-flat rabbit corpses of the A316.

Massive buildings were concocted with red-and-gray granite and alabaster, and purple-red porphyry from Egypt, black-and-yellow marble from Numidia, green cipollino from Eubold, and the white stones of the Carrara quarries near Luna.

Even when I was first perusing them, the Church had for long been frowning darkly on every work written by a Goth, or written about the Goths, or written in the Old Language, whether in the futhark runes or in the more modern alphabet concocted by Wulfilas.

If they had only been in Jericho, that letter would have rung through the world and stirred all the hearts of all the nations for a thousand years to come, and nobody might ever have found out that it was the confoundedest, brazenest, ingeniousest piece of fraud and humbuggery that was ever concocted to fool poor confiding mortals with!

I would be prepared to swear formally that Marcus Livius Drusus allied himself with those two Italians and concocted a plan to tamper with the census.

After he spoke with Leyton, Buck concocted an elaborate list of errands to get Natalie out of the house, then went home.

She pictured Nemoto, stranded centuries out of her time, isolated, skulking in corners of the Moon, concocting mad schemes to hurl outer-planet moons back and forth, an old woman fighting the alien invasion, single-handed.

Jill told me that Mai Tais were originally concocted with a wicked local brew called okolehao, distilled from the fermented root of the Ii plant, the same useful plant that provided the leaves for the famous grass skirts.

Caine and Pallas had concocted this whole fantastic plan to make him expose himself, to draw him out where they could humiliate him before the world and destroy his last chance for happiness.

Using the peanuts, tomatoes, and chilis of the New World and their own native palm oil, coconut, and dried shrimp, they concocted rich sauces for fish and poultry.

He wanders onwards and upwards in zig-zag fashion until he finds himself, at last, above the Festival tree-line and out of tambourine-rattling reach of the hordes of street harpists, flautists, violinists, cellists, banjo players, bongo drummers, mime artistes, puppeteers, body-paint workshops, Irish line dancers, hip-hop dancers and the familiar chorus of unicyclists, stilt-walkers, clowns and jugglers, all of them desperately performing to the hilt as if on the orders of some mad film director concocting an ambitious epic in which they will play the street people.

Concocting plausible but unsubstantiated reasons why any historical figure that somebody disliked or disagreed with had been a Jevlenese agent had become something of a game in the popular media.

I have no doubt that whatever plan Artemis concocts will feature yours truly.