Dog
English
Etymology
The figurative sense "Newcastle Brown Ale" comes from the euphemism "I'm going to walk the dog" or "I'm going to see a man about a dog", meaning "I'm going to the pub for a drink". This was further popularised by a 1980s advertising campaign.
Proper noun
Dog
- A name given to a dog
- 1979, Allen Eyles, John Wayne
- He is about to break up a small lynching party down below, thinks better of it (muttering to his dog, called Dog, "No, sir, I ain't")
- 1979, Allen Eyles, John Wayne
- A nickname given to people, especially tough men
- 1994, Larry Woody, A Dixie Farewell: The Life and Death of Chucky Mullins
- Brewer, whose coaching nickname is "Dog," recognized that same stubborn, dogged determination in Mullins.
- 1994, Larry Woody, A Dixie Farewell: The Life and Death of Chucky Mullins
- The language supposedly spoken by dogs
- 2015, Harper Lin, Pawsitively Dead: A Wonder Cats Mystery
- I blinked. “I thought you were talking to Blake about a dog.”
- “Cath,” Jake said, “I'm trying to be more open about this. Didn't you just say that you could talk to animals?”
- The realization dawned on me. “I don't speak Dog very well, but it's worth a try.”
- 2015, Harper Lin, Pawsitively Dead: A Wonder Cats Mystery
- The eleventh of the 12-year cycle of animals which appear in the Chinese zodiac related to the Chinese calendar.
- (Geordie, slang) Newcastle Brown Ale[1]
Synonyms
- (The language spoken by dogs): dog, dogspeak
- (Newcastle Brown Ale): Broon (Geordie), Broonale (Geordie), Journey into Space (Geordie, idiomatic), Newkie Brown
References
- ↑ “Last orders”, in Evening Chronicle, 25 January 2008, retrieved 9 April 2013
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