English

edit

Etymology

edit

UK circa 1760. Eponymous of Edward Cocker (1631–1676), teacher and author of the popular mathematics textbook known as Cocker's Arithmetick (1678).

Pronunciation

edit

Prepositional phrase

edit

according to Cocker

  1. (dated, colloquial, British, idiomatic) Done properly, correctly and reliably; in accordance with proper procedure and established rules.
    • 1859–1861, [Thomas Hughes], “A Crisis”, in Tom Brown at Oxford: [], part 2nd, Boston, Mass.: Ticknor and Fields, published 1861, →OCLC, page 140:
      “Well, so you ought to be, according to Cocker, spending all your time in sick rooms.”
      “According to who?”
      According to Cocker.”
      “Who is Cocker?”
      “Oh, I don't know; some old fellow who wrote the rules of arithmetic, I believe; it's only a bit of slang. []
    • 1885, Lewis Hough, “Touch and Go!”, in For Fortune and Glory:
      A man rode at an Arab who fired and missed him, and then seized his spear, with the apparent intention of meeting him as an infantry soldier should, according to Cocker.
    • 1931, R[ichard] Austin Freeman, “Of a Hansom Cab and a Black Eagle”, in Pontifex, Son And Thorndyke[1]:
      It seems that a certain constable whose beat included Dorchester Square was going his round rather late one evening when he noticed a hansom cab drawn up about the middle of the south side of the square. There was no sign of the driver, and no one minding the horse; and as this was not quite according to Cocker, it naturally attracted his attention.
edit