dougher
See also: Dougher
English
    
    Alternative forms
    
Etymology
    
From Middle English dower, equivalent to dough + -er.
Pronunciation
    
- Rhymes: -əʊə(ɹ)
 
Noun
    
dougher (plural doughers)
- (obsolete) A baker.
- 1871, Sydney Smith, The Edinburgh Review Or Critical Journal:
- Among the ordinances of the Bakers of Exeter, is a provision that all 'dowers' (doughers or bakers) of the city and suburbs should grind at the city mills, and nowhere else; […]
 
 - 1881, The Northwestern Miller - Volume 12, page 294:
- Among the archives of the Pillsbury A mill is the following, which was recently found spread over a pine board in hieroglyphics by some unknown and nailed on the door of the dougher's room.
 
 - 1889, The Electrical Journal - Volume 22, page 518:
- The ovens are heated by electricity, and the dougher, when he wants the ovens warm, just turns a switch throwing the current on, and in a few minutes the temperature is exactly what he wants, and is under perfect control.
 
 - 1915, The Journal of Education - Volume 47, page 667:
- That "deye" meant originally a dougher or maker, then a dairymaid, and lastly a farm hand, as in Scott's novels, he is not told.
 
 
 
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