also MOCKEDAR, MOCKENDAR, MOCKETER, MOCTOUR, MOKADOR, MOKADOUR, MOKEDORE, MUCKETER, MUCKETTER, MUCKINDER, MUCKINGER, MUCKITER CLICK HERE FOR KEY TO SOURCES probably from either Catalan mocador (1420) or Old Occitan mocador (although this is apparently first attested slightly later (1441); Occitan mocador, mochador, (Gascon) mocader ) from mocarse to blow one's nose ( from post-classical Latin muccare + -ador (from classical Latin -tōrium); Compare French mouchoir, Italian moccadore, moccatore (1598 in Florio), Italian regional (Calabria) muccaturu, (Sicily) muccaturi, Spanish mocador (1517, rare; probably from Catalan), †mocadero (1734, rare) 1420 - Calendar of Select Pleas and Memoranda Rolls of the City of London, A. H. Thomas; see below From: Calendar of Plea and Memoranda Rolls Edited by A.H. Thomas Roll A48 8 Jan. 1420 P. 74 From: The Works of Beaumont and Fletcher
Edited by Henry Weber Volume the Ninth, 1812 The Captain Act III. Scene V. P. 208
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