cookie

listen to the pronunciation of cookie
English - Turkish
kurabiye

Tabakta birçok kurabiye bulunmasına rağmen, sadece üç tane yedim. - Even though there were many cookies on the dish, I only ate three.

Mary Tom'un partisi için üç düzine kurabiye pişirdi. - Mary baked three dozen cookies for Tom's party.

{i} biri

Bu kurabiyelerden birini yiyebilir miyim? - Would it be OK if I ate one of these cookies?

Bu kurabiyelerden birini denemek istiyorum. - I'd like to try one of those cookies.

{i} bisküvi

Çayınızla bisküvi ister misiniz? - Would you like cookies with your tea?

Lütfen bisküvilere buyurun. - Please help yourself to the cookies.

smart cookie açıkgöz kimse
{i} kurabiye, (tatlı) çörek, (tatlı) kuru pasta; (tatlı) bisküvi
{i} adam

Ümit; bir saat önce bitirdiğin çikolatalı çörek kutusunun sihirle tekrar dolup dolmadığını kontrol etmek için çılgın bir adam gibi birdenbire mutfağa doğru koştuğundadır. - Hope is when you suddenly run to the kitchen like a mad man to check if the empty chocolate cookie box you just finished an hour ago is magically full again.

(Gıda) kraker
(Bilgisayar) tanımlama bilgisi
tatlı bisküvi
şahıs
{i} bebek

Bebek Kate tarafından yetiştirildi. - Cookie was raised by Kate.

{i} çekici kadın
{i} çörek

Tom'a bazı çörekler pişirdim. - I baked some cookies for Tom.

Bir çörek ya da bir şey ister misin? - Do you want a cookie or something?

kadın/adam/kurabiye
tatlı çörek
(Denizbilim) bobin
tatlı kuru pasta
cooky
{i} kurabiye
Cookie Monster
(Televizyon) Kurabiye canavarı
cookie dough
kurabiye hamuru
cookie sheet
Çerez levha
cookie domain
(Bilgisayar) tanım bilgisi etki alanı
cookie path
(Bilgisayar) tanım bilgisi yolu
cookie servers
(Bilgisayar) tanımlama bilgisi sunucuları
cookies
(Gıda) bisküvi

Tom bize bisküviler pişirirdi. - Tom used to bake us cookies.

Onlar bir kutu bisküvi aldılar. - They bought a box of cookies.

almond cookie
(Gıda) acı badem kurabiyesi
cookie cutter
(Gıda) kurabiye kalıbı
cookies
(Bilgisayar) tanımlama bilgileri
cookies
(Bilgisayar) çerezler

Bunlar ne tür çerezler? - What kind of cookies are these?

tough cookie
(Ev ile ilgili) kararlı, güçlü kişi
tough cookie
(Ev ile ilgili) çetin ceviz
anise cookie
anasonlu çörek
cooky
bkz.cookie
raisin nut cookie
kuru üzümlü kek
cooky
bebek
fortune cookie
kısmet kurabiyesi ; içinde fal olan kurabiye
smart cookie
zeki insan
tough cookie
dişli, mücadele edilmesi zor kişi
type of cookie; type of silk
çerez türü; ipek türü
cooky
i., bak. cookie
cooky
{i} adam
cooky
{i} bisküvi
cooky
{i} çekici kadın
that's the way the cookie crumble
(deyim) atasozu- durum budur ve kimse onu degistiremez
tracking cookie
(Bilgisayar) takip çerezi
English - English
A young, attractive woman
A specifically American-style biscuit
A small flat, baked cake which is either crisp or soft but firm (often with chocolate chips, candies or nuts mixed in.)
a bun
An HTTP cookie, web cookie
A magic cookie
Instructions included in the HTML code of some sites place small files on visitors' computers that can then be accessed by the server that hosts the site whenever a visitor returns Many cookies, such as those Amazon com uses, help make logging in to an account you've already set up much faster and easier The use of cookies is one of the issues in the privacy debate, since cookies can also be used to collect information about how a particular person uses the Internet, which can then be sold or distributed without a person's knowledge or express permission Back to top
A capability of some Web browsers which allows Web servers to store information about user visits to the Web site on the hard disk in the user's PC or workstation Because it can be used to identify repeat visitors the cookie allows on the fly customization of a Web site to feature items the user showed an interest in during previous visits The cookie also allows a Web server to track the sequence of a session on a Web site, including how long a user spent on each Web page While a boon to marketing on the Web the cookie raises some privacy issues because it removes some of the traditional anonymity associated with viewing Web sites and uses a small portion of the user's hard disk (See Web, browser, server, and Web site in the hard copy dictionary )
A cookie is a small file that a web page on another machine writes to your personal machine's disk to store various bits of information Many people strongly detest cookies and the whole idea of them, and most browsers allow the reception of cookies to be disabled or at least selectively disabled, but it should be noted that both Netscape and MSIE have silent cookie reception enabled by default Sites that maintain shopping carts or remember a reader's last position have legitimate uses for cookies Sites without such functionality that still spew cookies with distant (or worse, non-existent) expiration dates should perhaps be treated with a little caution
{i} small sweet cake which is baked on flat pans (also cooky, cookey); (Computers) file planted on a user's hard disk by an Internet site (contains personal information about the user and is used to develop target audiences for Internet advertising); cook on a ranch, cook at a camp; (Slang) person of a specified nature (e.g. "She is a smart cookie"; "Tom is a tough cookie")
A message from a WEB SERVER computer, sent to and stored by your browser on your computer When your computer consults the originating server computer, the cookie is sent back to the server, allowing it to respond to you according to the cookie's contents The main use for cookies is to provide customized Web pages according to a profile of your interests When you log onto a "customize" type of invitation on a Web page and fill in your name and other information, this may result in a cookie on your computer which that Web page will access to appear to "know" you and provide what you want If you fill out these forms, you may also receive e-mail and other solicitation independent of cookies
A file on your computer that records information such as where you have been on the World Wide Web The browser stores this information which allows a site to remember the browser in future transactions or requests Since the Web's protocol has no way to remember requests, cookies read and record a user's browser type and IP address, and store this information on the user's own computer The cookie can be read only by a server in the domain that stored it Visitors can accept or deny cookies, by changing a setting in their browser preferences
A small text file that is stored in the user's browser by the Web server Under the HTTP protocol, a server or a script can use cookies to maintain information on the client computer Cookies contain information about the user, such as an identification number, a password, how a user shops on a Web site, or how many times the user visits that site A Web site can access cookie information whenever the user connects to the server
The most common meaning of "Cookie" on the Internet refers to a piece of information sent by a Web Server to a Web Browser that the Browser software is expected to save and to send back to the server whenever the browser makes additional requests from the server Depending on the type of Cookie used, and the Browser's settings, the Browser may accept or not accept the Cookie, and may save the Cookie for either a short time or a long time Examples of Cookie use include login or registration information, online "shopping carts" or user surveys When a Server receives a request from the Browser that includes a Cookie, the Server is able to use the information stored in the Cookie for a variety of things such as to customize what is sent back to the user or to track a particular user's requests Cookies are typically set to expire after a predetermined amount of time and are typically saved in memory until the Browser software is closed down, at which time they may be saved to disk
any of various small flat sweet cakes (`biscuit' is the British term)
If you say that someone is a tough cookie, you mean that they have a strong and determined character
A cookie is a little piece of information handed to a WWW client by a WWW server that contains information that can be retrieved by the server later For instance, a server can hand your browser a cookie when you fill out a form stating your preferences for visiting that server Then, the next time you visit the site, the server can read your preferences from the cookie it put in your browser on the first visit, and customize the appearance of the web site to your preferences A cookie can also be called a Persistent Client Side State Object Back to Top
A cookie is a file used to record and store a variety of information on a user's computer Cookies are placed by an external source during a certain event, such as the display of an ad A cookie can be read only by the server in the domain that stored it Cookies placed by Fastclick com on user's computers as part of the ad serving process do not collect, store or transmit personally identifiable information Users can accept or deny cookies, by changing a setting in their browser preferences The denial of cookies severely limits the customization and interactivity of a user's online experience
the cook on a ranch or at a camp
Cookies are a bit of data a website may store on your computer through your web-browser that allows the web-site to keep track of your settings and other information They are not a security risk, and only allow your browser to send the data back to the server that originally set it VoyForums uses cookies in the Owner Login area for user convenience so the user does not need to enter their password repeatedly You can enable cookies in your web-browser, please see our FAQ under "How do I enable cookies in my browser?"
A unique identifier sent to a user's computer during a visit to a Web site Cookies can be used to remember information such as user names and passwords (so a users don't have to enter them every time they visit a site) or to track future visits to a Web site
a short line of text that a web site puts on your computer's hard drive when you access the web site any of various small flat sweet cakes (`biscuit' is the British term) the cook on a ranch or at a camp
A cookie is a piece of computer software which enables a website you have visited to recognize you if you visit it again. File or part of a file put on a Web user's hard disk by a Web site. Cookies are used to store registration data, to make it possible to customize information for visitors to a Web site, to target Web advertising, and to keep track of the products a user wishes to order online. Early browsers often enabled cookies to track which Web sites a user has visited and to retrieve data from other parts of the user's hard disk; current browsers prevent this and permit a site to have access only to cookies written by that site
A cookie is a text file placed on your hard drive by some web pages that you have visit It is a piece of information sent by a web server to a web browser that the browser software is expected to save and to send back to the server whenever the browser makes additional requests from the server
A transaction ID used between cooperating programs Cookies are used by some browsers and Web server programs to identify the client user and even unique preferences or requests from the client user Cookies may be stored for use during a given session, for a set length of time (seconds, minutes, hours, or days), or retained permanently Cookie information is stored with the browser on the client side; the information is automatically accessed and used by the browser in subsequent transactions
A young, attractive woman. As it is often intended to sexually objectify said woman, it can be seen as offensive (though only mildly, as it is a somewhat dated term, but not yet obsolete)
A piece of information sent by a Web server to a user's browser (A Web server is the computer that "hosts" a Web site, and responds to requests from a user's browser ) Cookies may include information such as login or registration identification, user preferences, online "shopping cart" information, etc The browser saves the information, and sends it back to the Web server whenever the browser returns to the Web site The Web server may use the cookie to customize the display it sends to the user, or it may keep track of the different pages within the site that the user accesses Browsers may be configured to alert the user when a cookie is being sent, or to refuse to accept cookies Some sites, however, cannot be accessed unless the browser accepts cookies (See also "Personally identifiable information")
The most common meaning of Cookie on the Internet refers to a piece of information sent by a web server to a web browser that the browser software is expected to save and to send back to the server whenever the browser makes additional requests from the server Depending on the type of Cookie used, and the browser's settings, the browser may accept or not accept the Cookie and may save the Cookie for either a short time or a long time Cookies might contain information such as login or registration information, online shopping cart information, user preferences, etc
A Cookie is a mechanism by which server side operations (such as CGI scripts) can store and retrieve information on the client side of the connection In practice, this means that information submitted by a web browser to a web server via a form or other interactive method can be stored on the browser machine and resubmitted when the web server URL is accessed at some point in the future Examples would include login or registration information, online "shopping carts" or user surveys Since cookies can store user information (on the user's own computer), they are used to personalize the WWW experience by recognizing and acknowledging the user when reentering a web site Cookies are typically set to expire after a predetermined amount of time Cookies *do not* read your hard drive and send your life story to the CIA
A cookie is a sweet biscuit
A file on your computer that records information such as where your have been on the Web, in order to remember and facilitate future requests Users can accept or deny cookies by changing their browser settings
A small file used to store information about the Web sites that a user visits Some users consider cookies a security risk If the cookie feature is enabled in a user's browser, a Web site can store information on the user's hard drive, including a customized profile of the user at a site, items the user may have purchased at a site, and so on
A small string of text that is stored on your machine by the browser at the request of a Web site Its purpose is to keep track of who you are (profile information such as your name) and what you do (your activities at that site such as which products you look at) Cookies are not usually nefarious in their purposes One site's cookies cannot be accessed by another site Often, cookies are used by advertisers to record the fact that they have already shown you a popup advertisment, and should wait a while before showing the ad to you again Nonetheless, some users consider cookies invasive of privacy and disable them PopUpCop can prevent web sites from storing cookies However, it is no substitute for a robust cookie management system, like the privacy control system in Internet Explorer version 6 Many web sites rely on cookies for managing complex interactions and cannot function without them Hence, if you disable cookies, you might choose to enable them for sites you care about
A small amount of state data stored permanently or temporarily by the client Cookies are transmitted to and from the server and allow a web site to remember things about the client, e g whether the user has previously visited the site Cookies can be written and read by CGI and JavaScript scripts
A small piece of information that a server sends to a client When you visit a Web site with cookie capabilities, its server sends certain information about you to your browser which is stored on your hard drive as a text file At some later time (such as returning to the site the next day), the server retrieves the cookie It's a way for the server to remember things about you
piece of information sent by a web server to a web browser that the browser software is expected to save and send back to the server whenever the browser makes additional requests from the server
A small piece of information you may be asked to accept when connecting to certain servers via a web browser It is used throughout your session as a means of identifying you A cookie is specific to, and sent only to the server that generated it
a short line of text that a web site puts on your computer's hard drive when you access the web site
A small bit of information stored on your computer by some web sites When you visit such a site, the site asks your browser to place one or more cookies on your hard disk Later, when you return to the site, your browser sends the site the cookies that belong to it Cookies help web sites keep track of information about you, such as the contents of your shopping cart You can set your cookie preferences to control how cookies are used and how much information you are willing to let web sites store on them See also foreign_cookie
biscuit
Cookie Monster
A popular blue creature from the children's television show Sesame Street who is intensely fond of cookies

In his Cookie Monster voice, he screamed, Bing- go! Jack-pot! Koo-key!.

cookie cutter
A device used to cut flattened dough into shapes before baking
cookie cutters
plural form of cookie cutter
cookie dough
A flavor designed to emulate the taste of the paste
cookie dough
A paste usually formed of flour, sugar, water, eggs, and other ingredients which, when baked, hardens to form a cookie or a number of cookies
cookie doughs
plural form of cookie dough
cookie jar
The storage space for browser cookies
cookie jar
A vessel for storing cookies or other food

I'll just put these cookies in the cookie jar and I'll be right out.

cookie jars
plural form of cookie jar
cookie sheet
A wide, flat metal pan suitable for baking in an oven
cookie sheets
plural form of cookie sheet
cookie-cutter
Of or pertaining to cookie cutters
cookie-cutter
Looking or seeming identical; created by some standard or common means; often with the implication that the result is common, boring, or not applicable to all needs

I don't think a cookie-cutter solution will work in all cases.

Cookie Monster
(Televizyon) A Muppet on the children's television show Sesame Street. He is best known for his voracious appetite and his famous eating phrases: "Me want cookie!", "Me eat cookie!", and "Om nom nom nom" (said through a mouth full of food). He often eats anything and everything, including danishes, donuts, lettuce, apples, bananas, as well as normally inedible objects. However, as his name suggests, his preferred food is cookies. Chocolate chip cookies are his favorite kind; oatmeal cookies are his second favorite
cookie dough
Cookie dough refers to a blend of cookie ingredients which has been mixed into a solid yet malleable form but has not yet been hardened by heat. The dough is often then separated and the portions baked to individual cookies, or eaten as is
Cookie Crusher
(Computers, Internet) program that prevents "cookie" programs from penetrating into a user's hard disk ("cookie" = file planted on a user's hard disk by an Internet site that contains information about the user)
Cookie Monster
a character in the US television programme Sesame Street who loves to eat cookies. He always appears when anyone has cookies, and he eats all of them very quickly, loudly, and wildly
cookie cutter
A device for cutting flattened cookie dough into shapes before baking. 'cookie .cutter an instrument that cuts cookies into special shapes before you bake them. almost exactly the same as other things of the same type, and not very interesting
cookie cutter
a kitchen utensil used to cut a sheet of cookie dough into desired shapes before baking
cookie jar
a jar in which cookies are kept (and sometimes money is hidden)
cookie jar reserve
a hidden reserve that can be used to adjust quarterly earning reports
cookie sheet
a cooking utensil consisting of a flat rectangular metal sheet used for baking cookies or biscuits
cookie sheet
A baking sheet. a flat piece of metal that you bake food on British Equivalent: baking tray
cookie-cutter
having the same appearance (as if mass-produced); "a suburb of cookie-cutter houses"
cookie-cutter
having the same appearance (as if mass-produced); "a suburb of cookie-cutter houses
Christmas cookie
A sugar cookie, usually cut in festive shapes, that is made and eaten at Christmas
HTTP cookie
A packet of information sent by a server to a World Wide Web browser and then returned by the browser each time it accesses that server, used to maintain state between otherwise stateless HTTP transactions, for example, to identify the user
caught in the cookie jar
Alternative form of caught with one's hand in the cookie jar
caught raiding the cookie jar
Alternative form of caught with one's hand in the cookie jar
caught with one's fingers in the cookie jar
Alternative form of caught with one's hand in the cookie jar
caught with one's hand in the cookie jar
Observed or apprehended while committing a theft, especially while embezzling money

Frankenmanto was, in fact, a certified kleptomaniac who had to carry a doctor’s letter on her to explain the embarrassing little moments when she was caught with her hand in the cookie jar.

caught with the cookie jar
Alternative form of caught with one's hand in the cookie jar
fortune cookie
A type of hollow snack, common in westernized Chinese food, containing a message on a narrow strip of paper
fortune cookie
A quote-of-the-day feature (especially on *nix systems.)
magic cookie
A token or short packet of data passed between communicating programs, used to identify a particular event or transaction; the data is typically not meaningful to the recipient program and not usually interpreted until the recipient passes the data back to the sender or another program at a later time
sharp cookie
One who is intelligent, bright, or sharp; especially, one who can identify attempts to deceive or mislead

She's a sharp cookie and will have no trouble seeing a sales pitch for what it is.

sugar cookie
A cookie with granules of sugar sprinkled on the top before baking
that's the way the cookie crumbles
That is the way things happen; that's life
tough cookie
A person who can endure physical or mental hardship; a hardened, strong-willed person

Although she's a small-framed woman, we all believed she came through the Marines and maybe ate nails for breakfast because she's one tough cookie, said Horace Taylor.

what do you want, a cookie
A phrase sometimes given as a retort to someone who has done something unsurprising or unimpressive and has seen fit to inform one of having done so

The way I see it, I'm already doing all the work, and I'm doing the spells and incantations, stated Bowolf. So what do you want, a cookie? laughed Prolok.

tough cookie
a person who is difficult to deal with
fortune cookie
A cookie made from a thin layer of dough folded and baked around a slip of paper bearing a prediction of fortune or a maxim
A cookie
biscuit
Christmas cookie
a special cookie that people eat in the US at Christmas
That's the way the cookie crumbles
(Colloquial) that is how things generally turn out, that's the way things happen; that is the way it goes; that's life
Toll House cookie
A trademark used for a cookie made with flour, butter, and brown sugar and containing semisweet chocolate chips and often chopped nuts
almond cookie
very rich cookie containing ground almonds; usually crescent-shaped
anise cookie
drop cookie made without butter and flavored with anise seed
butter cookie
cookie containing much butter
chocolate chip cookie
cookies containing chocolate chips
chocolate chip cookie
a kind of small biscuit with small pieces of chocolate in it
cookies
Cookies are small text files that Web sites place in your computer to help your browsers remember specific information For example, they might store your passwords and user IDs They are also used to store your preferences for content or personalized pages Most shopping carts use cookies These allow you to choose items and leave the virtual store, then return later and find that all the items are still in your shopping cart Cookies are also used to build a profile of which sites you visit and which banner ads you click on Advertisers use this information to deliver targeted ads directly to your computer Some sites save your preferences on the cookie itself Other sites assign users ID numbers or encoded passwords and keep records of your preferences at their end Some sites use temporary cookies (called session cookies) that are deleted when you exit your browser Others place persistent cookies, which stay on your hard drive for long periods
cookies
plural of cookie
cookies
A means by which, under the HTTP protocol, a server or a script can maintain state or status information on the client workstation In other words, a cookie is bits of information about a person's visit to a Web page A cookie can include such information as the way a Web page was customized or how a visitor shopped on a Web site, or it can be used to track repeat visits
cookies
The name for files stored on your hard drive by your Web browser that holds information about your identity or browsing habits A common type of cookie is a user name and password cookie that is used by a Web site you visit frequently so you do not have to retype in a user name and password with each visit
cookies
A way to store information behind an HTML document for the server from the client side Cookies retrieve information from the client's browser Why? When you shop on the net or have to enter preferences on a particular site, the server stores that information for your use so you don't have to fill out additional forms or preferences each time you visit It's kind of like having a customer account with a web site
cookies
Cookies are small text files that are created by some Websites and stored on your hard drive Cookies are used so that a Website can "remember" you the next time you visit it and present you with a customised page, such as one containing your name
cookies
A cookie is a piece of information stored on a user's hard disk which is attributed when they visit a specific site It is a text file, not a program A site can only read the information in a cookie which was written by that site The information that can be stored in a cookie consists of the date and time of the visit and any information given whilst on the site A cookie can be created, for example, when shopping on a web site and accessed by the site if the user visits again
cookies
A means by which, under the HTTP protocol, a server or a script can maintain information on the client computer Cookies are small text files which are stored in the user's browser by the Web server Cookies contain information about the user such as an identification number, a password, how a user shopped on a Web site, or how many times the user visited that site A Web site can access cookie information whenever the user connects to the server
cookies
These little guys are used to store information on your computer Cookies provide Website customization features Some later browser versions allow you to know in advance that a cookie is coming your way in which case you may decide you do or do not want to accept the cookie
cookies
Persistent Client-State HTTP Cookies are files containing information about visitors to a web site (e g , user name and preferences) This information is provided by the visitor during the first visit to a Web server The server records this information in a text file and stores this file on the visitor's hard drive When the visitor accesses the same web site again, the server looks for the cookie and configures itself based on the information provided
cookies
Cookies are almost invisible packets of information stored on your computer These packets save information that allow you to visit particular web sites faster Passwords, preferences and personal information are stored in these cookies and sent from your computer to the particular web site to save you from having to log on and fill out a bunch of information every time you visit a particular site It's like Norm walking into Cheers without having to be reintroduced to the bar patrons every time
cookies
The most common meaning of "Cookie" on the Internet refers to a piece of information sent by a Web Server to a Web Browser that the Browser software is expected to save and to send back to the Server whenever the browser makes additional requests from the Server
cookies
Small text files created by an Internet web site and stored on the user's computer A cookie contains information that can help speed access on subsequent visits, such as passwords and details of the user's display facilities
cookies
A cookie is a text file placed on your hard drive by some Web pages that you visit The cookie allows the Webmaster to track your visits to their Website as well as correlate that information with other information such as the previous page you visited, your operating system, your browser plus any information that you volunteer via a form When you return to that Website the site will retrieve your cookie file from your hard drive and use whatever information is stored to target content and advertising to both your stated preferences (where asked) and the behavior that you exhibited It is this technology that allows you to store items in an electronic shopping basket and "remember" other useful pieces of information such as passwords
cookies
A cookie is a small piece of textual information, sent to your browser from the website or web server you are visiting If a site you visit uses cookies, that site's web server queries your browser for permission to pass a cookie to your browser's directory At a minimum, any cookie saved in your browser's directory is stored in RAM during your session Many sites also store the cookie on your hard drive in a text file after you leave (log off) their site Cookies are used for many purposes such as website tracking, shopping cart identification, ascertaining information about the machine you are using, personalizing your site visit, and storing information like passwords and user ID's for a particular site The web server issuing the cookie, is the only server that can read that particular cookie Cookies cannot retrieve information from your hard drive or profile your system
cookies
A cookie is a file sent to a web browser by a web server to record one's activities on a website For instance, when you buy items from a site and place them in a so-called virtual shopping cart, that information is stored in the cookie When the browser requests additional files, the cookie information is sent back to the server Cookies can remember other kinds of personal information --your password, so you don't have to re-enter it each time you visit the site; your preferences, so the next time you return to a site, you can be presented with customized information Some people regard cookies as an invasion of privacy; others think they are a harmless way to make websites more personal
cookies
Small files that are downloaded to your computer when you browse certain web pages Cookies hold information that can be retrieved by other web pages on the site
cookies
Small files that are automatically downloaded from a Web server to the hard drive of someone browsing a Web site Information stored in cookies can then be accessed any time that computer returns to the site Cookies allow Web sites to "personalize" their appearance by identifying visitors, storing passwords, tracking preferences, and other possibilities
cookies
A cookie is a small piece of information When visiting someweb sites a small packet of data, or cookie, is stored on your harddisk and accessed by the web server every time you move around thesite This allows the site to record information about the qualityof navigation as well as user habits and interests
cookies
Information a site can store and retrieve from your computer about what you do on that site Find the file "cookies txt" on your computer to learn more
cookies
Persistent Client-State HTTP Cookies are files containing information about visitors to a web site (e g user name and preferences) This information is provided by the user during the first visit to a web server The server records this information in a text file and stores this file on the visitor's hard drive When the visitor accesses the same web site again the server looks for the cookie and configures itself based on the information provided
cookies
These aren't the kind your Grandma used to make! Web cookies are files containing information about visitors to a website, like username, password, and what they want to buy It is stored on the visitor's computer, and sent back to the website that created it when the visitor comes back or gets to the order page Cookies can also retrieve information like monitor resolution and platform to webmasters who intend to use this information to improve their website
cookies
PE saves certain information between sessions on your computer This information includes the most recently loaded molecules (for the Select previously loaded PDB file menu on the Load Molecules control page), preferences, The browser mechanism for saving such information is called "cookies" for obscure reasons Here is more information about cookies and cookie safety
cookies
Small data files written to a user's hard drive by a web server These files contain specific information that identifies users (e g , passwords and lists of pages visited)
cookies
A message given to a Web browser by a Web server The browser stores the message in a text file The message is then sent back to the server each time the browser requests a page from the server The main purpose of cookies is to identify users and possibly prepare customized Web pages for them When you enter a Web site using cookies, you may be asked to fill out a form providing such information as your name and interests This information is packaged into a cookie and sent to your Web browser which stores it for later use The next time you go to the same Web site, your browser will send the cookie to the Web server The server can use this information to present you with custom Web pages So, for example, instead of seeing just a generic welcome page you might see a welcome page with your name on it
cookies
biscuits
cooky
A small, flat, sweetened cake of various kinds
cooky
any of various small flat sweet cakes (`biscuit' is the British term)
cooky
the cook on a ranch or at a camp
cooky
{i} small sweet cake which is baked on flat pans; (Computers) file planted on a user's hard disk by an Internet site (contains personal information about the user and is used to develop target audiences for Internet advertising); cook on a ranch, cook at a camp; (Slang) person of a specified nature (e.g. "She is a smart cookie"; "Tom is a tough cookie"), cookie, cookey
cooky
alternative spelling of cookie
fortune cookie
A fortune cookie is a sweet, crisp cake which contains a piece of paper which is supposed to say what will happen to you in the future. Fortune cookies are often served in Chinese restaurants. A cookie made from a thin layer of dough folded and baked around a slip of paper bearing a prediction of fortune or a maxim. a biscuit served in Chinese restaurants, containing a piece of paper that says what is supposed to happen to you in the future
fortune cookie
thin folded wafer containing a maxim on a slip of paper
honey cookie
cookie made with honey
molasses cookie
very spicy drop cookies sweetened partially with molasses
oatmeal cookie
cookies containing rolled oats
persistent cookie
A cookie that is saved with a user's browser settings for a fixed period of time (sometimes indefinitely ) Can be used to store a user's login information or prefered settings for a particular web site, but also to track users across multiple web sites, e g , to create profiles for marketing purposes Most privacy advocates are highly critical of this last use of persistent cookies (UpstateConsultants com never uses cookies in this way )
persistent cookie
A cookie that will write to a text file on a browser client and thus persist across browser sessions The Visited Sites cookie (written by the NET Passport domain authority) is a persistent cookie If a user chooses to save his or her password, the remaining three domain authority cookies (Ticket, Profile, and Ticket Granting) also become persistent cookies Persistent cookies are viewable on a client computer, but all NET Passport persistent cookies are encrypted
persistent cookie
A cookie that will write to a text file on a browser client and thus persist across browser sessions The Visited Sites cookie (written by a domain authority) is a persistent cookie If a user chooses to save his or her password, the remaining three domain authority cookies (Ticket, Profile and Ticket Granting) also become persistent cookies Persistent cookies are viewable on a client computer by examining them in the cache, but all Passport persistent cookies are encrypted
precision cookie
a cookie that is saved permanently on your hard drive
raisin cookie
cookie containing raisins
raisin-nut cookie
cookie filled with a paste of raisins and nuts
refrigerator cookie
dough formed into a roll and chilled in the refrigerator then sliced and baked
session cookie
a cookie that is stored temporarily and is destroyed when close the link
shortbread cookie
shortbread: very rich thick butter cookie
spice cookie
cookie flavored with spices
sugar cookie
drop cookies sprinkled with granulated sugar
tough cookie
strong person who doesn't give up
tough cookie
If you describe someone as a tough cookie, you mean that they are unemotional and are not easily hurt by what people say or do
cookie

    Hyphenation

    Cook·ie

    Turkish pronunciation

    kûki

    Synonyms

    biscuit, bickie

    Pronunciation

    /ˈko͝okē/ /ˈkʊkiː/

    Etymology

    () From Dutch koekje (possibly through dialectal variation koekie), a diminutive of koek (“a cake, a wafer”).

    Common Collocations

    cookie cutter

    Videos

    ... the thirteen century of cookie caravan serai is not situated on the ancient ...
    ... that they don't have to do a cookie-cutter, ...
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