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  2. Dictionary

    yoke
    [yōk]
    noun
    yoke (noun) · yokes (plural noun) · yoke (plural noun)
    1. a wooden crosspiece that is fastened over the necks of two animals and attached to the plow or cart that they are to pull.
    2. a part of a garment that fits over the shoulders and to which the main part of the garment is attached, typically in gathers or pleats:
      "the pinafore fell amply from a short yoke"
    3. a frame fitting over the neck and shoulders of a person, used for carrying pails or baskets.
    4. the crossbar at the head of a rudder, to whose ends ropes are fastened.
      • a bar of soft iron between the poles of an electromagnet.
    5. NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISH
      a control lever in an aircraft.
    verb
    yoke (verb) · yokes (third person present) · yoked (past tense) · yoked (past participle) · yoking (present participle)
    1. put a yoke on (a pair of animals); couple or attach with or to a yoke:
      "a plough drawn by a camel and donkey yoked together"
      Opposite:
      • cause (two people or things) to be joined in a close relationship:
        "Hong Kong's dollar has been yoked to America's"
    2. US ENGLISH
      informal
      attack, especially by strangling:
      "two crackheads yoked this girl"
    Origin
    Old English geoc (noun), geocian (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch juk, German Joch, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin jugum and Greek zugon, also by Latin jungere ‘to join’.
    yoke
    [yōk]
    noun
    IRISH ENGLISH
    informal
    yoke (noun) · yokes (plural noun)
    1. a thing whose name one cannot recall, does not know, or does not wish to specify:
      "how much did that yoke set you back?"
    Origin
    early 20th century: of unknown origin.
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  3. People also ask
    What is a yoke in the Bible?According to Easton’s Bible Dictionary, a yoke is a harness used by oxen and other animals to ease the work of hauling a load. It is defined as a curved piece of wood called an 'ol and was fitted on the neck of the animals to bind them to the traces (Numbers 19:2; Deuteronomy 21:3 ).
    What is a neck yoke?A wooden bar attached by wooden bows to the necks of a pair of draft animals such as oxen. The yoke could then be connected to the implement to be pulled. Yokes tended to choke horses and mules so, for them, Collars and Harness were used. Also, see Neck yoke.
    What is a yoke used for?A yoke is a curved piece of wood used as a harness for oxen and other animals to ease the work of hauling a load. In the Bible, it also symbolizes servitude and carrying the burden of a task or mission.
    What is a yoke of oxen?a pair of draft animals fastened together by a yoke: five yoke of oxen. something resembling a yoke or a bow of a yoke in form or use. a frame fitting the neck and shoulders of a person, for carrying a pair of buckets or the like, one at each end.
     
  4. a : a wooden bar or frame by which two work animals (as oxen) are joined at their heads or necks for pulling a plow or load b : a frame fitted to a person's shoulders to carry a load in two equal portions c : a clamp or brace that holds or unites two parts 2 plural usually yoke : two animals yoked together
    www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/yoke
    yoke noun [C] (CONNECTION) formal something that connects two things or people, usually in a way that unfairly limits freedom: the yoke of marriage Both countries had thrown off the communist yoke.
    dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/yoke
    /jəʊk/ [countable] a long piece of wood that is fastened across the necks of two animals, especially oxen, so that they can pull heavy loads
    www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/engli…
     
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