hooker1

[hoo k-er] /ˈhʊk ər/
noun
1.
a person or thing that hooks.
2.
Slang. prostitute.
3.
Slang. a large drink of liquor.
4.
Slang. a concealed problem, flaw, or drawback; a catch.
5.
Rugby. a player who hooks the ball in the front line of scrummage.
6.
(initial capital letter) Offensive. an Amish Mennonite.
Origin
1560-70; 1835-45, Americanism for def 2; hook1 + -er1

hooker2

[hoo k-er] /ˈhʊk ər/
noun, Nautical
1.
Slang. any old-fashioned or clumsy vessel.
2.
any fishing vessel working with hooks and lines rather than nets.
Origin
1635-45; < Dutch hoeker, equivalent to hoek hook1 + -er -er1

Hooker

[hoo k-er] /ˈhʊk ər/
noun
1.
Joseph, 1814–79, Union general in the U.S. Civil War.
2.
Richard, 1554?–1600, English author and clergyman.
3.
Thomas, 1586?–1647, English Puritan clergyman: one of the founders of the colony of Connecticut.
Examples from the web for hooker
  • Top dollar in the hooker business is a lot of money these days.
  • No set designer could have come up with anything grimmer, or grimier, for a hooker to be murdered in.
British Dictionary definitions for hooker

hooker1

/ˈhʊkə/
noun
1.
a commercial fishing boat using hooks and lines instead of nets
2.
a sailing boat of the west of Ireland formerly used for cargo and now for pleasure sailing and racing
Word Origin
C17: from Dutch hoeker

hooker2

/ˈhʊkə/
noun
1.
a person or thing that hooks
2.
(US & Canadian, slang)
  1. a draught of alcoholic drink, esp of spirits
  2. a prostitute
3.
(rugby) the central forward in the front row of a scrum whose main job is to hook the ball

Hooker

/ˈhʊkə/
noun
1.
John Lee. 1917–2001, US blues singer and guitarist
2.
Sir Joseph Dalton. 1817–1911, British botanist; director of Kew Gardens (1865–85)
3.
Richard. 1554–1600, British theologian, who influenced Anglican theology with The Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity (1593–97)
4.
Sir William Jackson. 1785–1865, British botanist; first director of Kew Gardens: father of Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker
Word Origin and History for hooker
n.

"prostitute," often traced to the disreputable morals of the Army of the Potomac (American Civil War) under the tenure of Gen. "Fighting Joe" Hooker (early 1863), and the word might have been popularized by this association at that time (though evidence is wanting). But it is reported to have been in use in North Carolina c.1845 ("[I]f he comes by way of Norfolk he will find any number of pretty Hookers in the Brick row not far from French's hotel. Take my advice and touch nothing in the shape of a prostitute when you come through Raleigh, for in honest truth the clap is there of luxuriant growth." letter quoted in Norman E. Eliason, "Tarheel Talk," 1956).

One early theory traces it to Corlear's Hook, a section of New York City.

HOOKER. A resident of the Hook, i.e. a strumpet, a sailor's trull. So called from the number of houses of ill-fame frequented by sailors at the Hook (i.e. Corlear's Hook) in the city of New York. [John Russell Bartlett, "Dictionary of Americanisms," 1859]
Perhaps related to hooker "thief, pickpocket" (1560s), but most likely a reference to prostitutes hooking or snaring clients. Hook in the figurative sense of "that by which anyone is attracted or caught" is recorded from early 15c.; and hook (v.) in the figurative sense of "catch hold of and draw in" is attested from 1570s; in reference to "fishing" for a husband or a wife, it was in common use from c.1800. All of which makes the modern sense seem a natural step. Cf. French accrocheuse, raccrocheuse, common slang term for "street-walker, prostitute," literally "hooker" of men.

The family name Hooker (attested from c.975 C.E.) would mean "maker of hooks," or else refer to an agricultural laborer who used a hook (cf. Old English weodhoc "weed-hook").

Slang definitions & phrases for hooker

hooker

modifier

: hooker district

noun
  1. A prostitute: drunken sportswriters, hard-eyed hookers, wandering geeks and hustlers/ The thirtyish ex-hooker was answering questions (1845+)
  2. A person who recruits, enlists, snares, etc: Hooker, a person who induces union members to act as spies (1850s+)
  3. A drink of liquor; snort: It took a stiff hooker of whiskey to thaw her (1887+)

[first noun sense apparently fr the notion that such women are ''hookers of men'']