A measurement of alcohol without definite amounts, meaning the same thing as a "slug" (of gin), an overlarge gulp. Used from the 1920s through the 1940s
The forward who usually wears No 2 The hooker is supported by the props in the scrum and is responsible for gaining possession of the ball by hooking or blocking it with a foot
(rugby) the player in the middle of the front row of the scrum who tries to capture the ball with the foot a golfer whose shots typically curve left (for right-handed golfers) English theologian (1554-1600) United States general in the Union Army who was defeated at Chancellorsville by Robert E
A hooker is a prostitute. English writer and theologian. His Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity (1594) was central to the formation of Anglican theology. English-born American colonizer and cleric who founded Hartford, Connecticut (1636). a woman who has sex with men for money = prostitute. Hooker Joseph Hooker Richard Hooker Thomas