As nouns the difference between miller and toddick
is that miller is a person who owns or operates a mill, especially a flour mill while toddick is a dish upon which the miller's share was measured as compensation for milling the farmer's meal.
As a proper noun Miller
is {{surname|A=An|English and Scottish occupational|from=occupations}} for a miller.
miller
English
See also
* Millward
toddick
English
Alternative forms
* toll-dish, taddle
Noun
(toddicks)
A dish upon which the miller's share was measured as compensation for milling the farmer's meal.
A very small quantity of something.