different between crocker vs cocker
crocker
English
Etymology
crock +? -er. The first written record of the word crocker dates back to 1315 AD. It might have been the common Anglo-Saxon term for potter before 1066 AD. It has also been used as a surname.
Noun
crocker (plural crockers)
- a potter.
See also
- croker
References
- Krueger, Dennis (December 1982). "Why On Earth Do They Call It Throwing?" Studio Potter Vol. 11, Number 1.[1] (etymology)
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cocker
English
Etymology 1
From cock (“a male bird, especially a rooster”) and its derivative cocking (“the hunting of gamecocks”), +? -er.
Noun
cocker (plural cockers)
- One who breeds gamecocks or engages in the sport of cockfighting.
- Synonym: cockfighter
- (dated) One who hunts woodcocks.
- (colloquial) A cocker spaniel, either of two breeds of dogs originally bred for hunting woodcocks.
- A device that aids in cocking a crossbow.
Derived terms
- cocker spaniel
Etymology 2
From Middle English coker (“a quiver, boot”) from Old English cocer (“quiver, case”) from Proto-West Germanic *kukur (“container, case”), said to be from Hunnic, possibly from Proto-Mongolic *kökexür (“leather vessel for liquids”). More at quiver.
Noun
cocker (plural cockers)
- A rustic high shoe; half-boot.
Etymology 3
Origin uncertain. Perhaps from Middle English cokeren (“to pamper, coddle”); compare Welsh cocru (“to indulge, fondle”), French coqueliner (“to dandle, to imitate the crow of a cock, to run after the girls”), and English cockle and cock (“rooster; to spoil”).
Noun
cocker (plural cockers)
- (Britain, informal) Friend, mate.
Synonyms
- See Thesaurus:friend
Derived terms
- old cocker
Verb
cocker (third-person singular simple present cockers, present participle cockering, simple past and past participle cockered)
- To make a nestle-cock of; to indulge or pamper (particularly of children).
Synonyms
- cosset, pamper, posset; see also Thesaurus:pamper
Derived terms
- cocker up
References
Anagrams
- recock
French
Etymology
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /k?.kœ?/, /k?.k??/
Noun
cocker m (plural cockers)
- cocker spaniel
Further reading
- “cocker” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Italian
Etymology
From English cocker
Noun
cocker m (invariable)
- cocker spaniel
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