rare. [f. YOKE v. + -ER1.] One who yokes.

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1483.  Cath. Angl., 427/1. A ȝoker, iugator.

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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.

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1854.  Keightley, Mythology of Ancient Greece and Italy (ed. 3), 414. Óríón was named by the Latins Jugula, the Yoked or Yoker.

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