Though cooker also means:

  • A person employed to operate cooking apparatuses in the commercial preparation of food and drink.

In more common terms, Cook and Cooker:

  • are two words in the English language that are quite often confused. The word ‘cook’ refers to a person who cooks food or prepares food. On the other hand a cooker is a kind of appliance or an apparatus used in the process of cooking.

  • As a matter of fact the word ‘cooker’ is vividly used in British English rather than American English. The equivalent for cooker in American English is either a range or a stove. The range is otherwise called as cooking range.

  • To say ‘My friend is a very good cooker’ is grammatically wrong. The right way of saying that is ‘My friend is a very good cook.’

  • Since the word ‘cooker’ is used to refer to the apparatus used in the act of cooking, you can use the word in sentences as follows:

      1. I prefer to buy gas cooker.
      1. A cooker is not a very expensive apparatus.
  • It is interesting to note that the word ‘cook’ has the same form when it used as a verb and as a noun. When used as a verb the word ‘cook’ means ‘prepare food by beating it’. Observe the sentences:

      1. He cooks well.
      1. The food is not cooked well.
  • In both the sentences given above, the word ‘cook’ is used in the sense of ‘preparation of food’. In the second sentence it means ‘the food is not prepared well’.

  • Cooker on the other hand is a container or device meant for cooking food. It is an appliance that is powered by electricity or gas for preparing food.

  • It is interesting to note that in British English the word ‘cooker’ sometimes refers to a fruit, especially an apple that is easily cooked than eaten raw. You cannot relish it eating raw but would enjoy it when cooked.