lacker
See also: läcker
English
Etymology 1
Noun
lacker (plural lackers)
- One who is lacking, or in want.
Etymology 2
Noun
lacker (countable and uncountable, plural lackers)
- Obsolete spelling of lacquer.
Quotations
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:lacker.
Verb
lacker (third-person singular simple present lackers, present participle lackering, simple past and past participle lackered)
- Obsolete spelling of lacquer.
- 1840, Frances Trollope, “Practical Information Carefully Obtained, and Promptly Acted upon— […]”, in The Widow Married; […], volume III, London: Henry Colburn, […], →OCLC, page 2:
- Had he deemed it "wisest, best," Mr. O'Donagough was not without the means of furnishing a splendid mansion in very showy style, and yet not leaving a single morsel of lacker, or or-molu, unpaid for.
Anagrams
Swedish
Noun
lacker
- indefinite plural of lack