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"stoked up" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It can be used as a way to describe a feeling of being excited, energized, or enthusiastic about something. Example: I'm feeling stoked up about starting my new job next week.
Exact(59)
Has it stoked up any thoughts?
Mr. Gore beamed as he stoked up his crowd.
My attachment with England as well, is something that stoked up passion in me.
Yet soccer's tribal aspects are being stoked up by the Spurs versus West Ham debate.
The events in Hungary and elsewhere stoked up anti-Russian fires.
Then, at the start of the second set, Moore came out and stoked up the crowd.
The smell of the fire stoked up with rosemary branches is delicious.
The protracted delay in delivering the decision stoked up political resentment against Strasbourg.
"Everyone was stoked up on adrenaline for the first couple of holes," Mike Atieh said.
Having Secretary Chu visit was an auspicious sign, Dr. Aronson said: "It stoked up the lab".
Similar(1)
And, of course, there were the Shangri-Las, who stoked up their image with surly photoshoots and deliberately unfeminine attire.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com