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cocker. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
cocker, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
cocker in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology 1
From cock (“a male bird, especially a rooster”) and its derivative cocking (“the hunting of gamecocks”), + -er (occupational suffix) or + -er (agent noun suffix).
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.
2007, Field and Stream - Volume 112, page 62:You have your choice of two stock-mounted cocking aids: the Acudraw 50, an integral rope cocker, or the Acudraw crank-operated device.
2011, Ritchie R. Moorhead, The Kid Looks Back-Short Stories & Tall Tales, page 48:The down side is that they are hard to draw without special lever cockers.
2013, Todd A. Kuhn, Shooter's Bible Guide to Bowhunting:The standard default cocking mechanism is the rope cocker.
Derived terms
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,[1] possibly from Proto-Mongolic *kökexür (“leather vessel for liquids”). More at quiver.
Noun
cocker (plural cockers)
- A rustic high shoe; half-boot.
- (obsolete) A quiver.
Etymology 3
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)
- (UK, informal) Friend, mate.
1993, Arnold Wesker, Bluey:I been to see 'im. Not pretty. Ward sister tell me 'e'll be alright but not for a while yet. Concussion. Bloody 'ell! Lucky 'e wasn't killed, lump of lead like that. Lucky for you too, cocker...
2004, Sue Townsend, Adrian Mole and The Weapons of Mass Destruction, →ISBN, page 361:He said, 'Not my cup of Darjeeling, cocker. I've been more intellectually challenged at a kiddies' swimming gala.'
Synonyms
Derived terms
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).
1879, Jean Ingelow, chapter 1, in Sarah De Berenger, Boston: Roberts Brothers, page 6:But if you was to ask your ma, she would tell you that poor folks can no ways afford to cocker themselves up as lying-in ladies do.
Synonyms
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References
Anagrams
French
Etymology
From English.
Pronunciation
Noun
cocker m (plural cockers)
- cocker spaniel
Further reading
Italian
Etymology
Pseudo-anglicism, a clipping of English cocker spaniel.
Noun
cocker m (invariable)
- cocker spaniel
Romanian
Etymology
Borrowed from French cocker.
Noun
cocker m (plural cockeri)
- cocker spaniel
Declension