1483. Cath. Angl., 427/1. A ȝoker, iugator.
1731. A. Hill, Advice to Poets, Ep. p. v. How little is it suspected, by Thousands, that a Poet is no Yoker of Sounds, or idle Assayer of Syllables.
1854. Keightley, Mythology of Ancient Greece and Italy (ed. 3), 414. Óríón was named by the Latins Jugula, the Yoked or Yoker.