Daker vs Oaker - What's the difference?
daker | oaker |
(obsolete, legal, UK, Scotland) A measure of certain commodities by number, usually ten or twelve, but sometimes twenty; as, a daker of hides consisted of ten skins; a daker of gloves of ten pairs.
* 1866: The dicker, or daker, was ten, and is found, though generally at later times than the period before us, as a measure for hides and gloves. — James Edwin Thorold Rogers, A History of Agriculture and Prices in England , Volume 1, p. 171.
As nouns the difference between daker and oaker
is that daker is (obsolete|legal|uk|scotland) a measure of certain commodities by number, usually ten or twelve, but sometimes twenty; as, a daker of hides consisted of ten skins; a daker of gloves of ten pairs while oaker is .daker
English
Alternative forms
* dakirNoun
(en noun)- (Burrill)