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  • etymology - Where does the word dog come from? - English Language . . .
    I discovered on a quiz show the other day that the word "dog" appears to have come from nowhere and displaced the German word "hund" Has any research revealed how it arrived in the English language?
  • etymology - Where did the term doggone it come from? - English . . .
    From Etymonline: doggone 1851, Amer Eng , a "fantastic perversion of god-damned" [Weekley] But Mencken favors the theory that it is "a blend form of dog on it; in fact it is still often used with it following It is thus a brother to the old English phrase, 'a pox upon it,' but is considerably more decorous " Others have it derived from the Scottish dagone, or "gone to the dogs," but there's
  • etymology - Why is dog in underdog? - English Language Usage . . .
    Dog seems a strange word to choose for this concept Does anyone know anything more than Dictionary com can tell me? Origin: 1875–80, Americanism; under- + dog Etymonline has a similar take, but
  • etymology - Why is the English word of Chinese origin Shih Tzu used . . .
    Meanwhile, the name "lion dog", in proper Chinese, refers to the Pekingese, a completely different breed that, if you ask me, better resembles lion statues So why is the English word of Chinese origin "Shih Tzu" used to refer to a dog breed not known in Chinese as "Shih Tzu"? Was it really the original name of this breed?
  • etymology - Meaning and origin of dog whistle (e. g. , Trumps . . .
    The recent United States political cycle has been using the term "dog whistle" a lot From a recent Rolling Stone headline: Trump's Assassination Dog Whistle Was Even Scarier Than You Think And t
  • etymology - The expression,You lie like a dog in straw - English . . .
    "Like a dog in a manger" is in Aesop's Fables (taken from a much earlier Greek fable), but it has a totally different meaning to "Lie like a dog in a manger" which arose much later and was, itself, intended to convey a quite different meaning to the expression I'm asking about ("You lie like a dog in straw") Also, I'm not sure why you would point out that the source of "lie like a dog" is
  • etymology - Hot Diggity . . . - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The phrase "hot diggity dog!" dates to at least 1928, when Al Jolson was recorded saying "Hot diggity dog! Hot kitty! Hot pussycat! Didn't I tell you you'd love it?" after a performance of the tune "There's A Rainbow Around My Shoulder" There was also a song from 1956 called "Hot Diggity (Dog Ziggity Boom)" (same article)
  • Why is it dog eat dog? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    But why dog-eat-dog and not dogs-eat-dogs? 'According to the Oxford English Dictionary man-bites-dog is an adjective of U S origin' [Everything2 thread] This shows that saying it is an adjective explains little about the reason for the internal form
  • etymology - Origin of dog (ging) it? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    The American Heritage Dictionary defines quot;dog it quot; as: Do less than is required; loaf or shirk For example, I'm afraid our donors are dogging it this year This expression originated in s
  • etymology - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    In the 19th century “dog’s body” was sailor slang for a common shipboard meal composed primarily of boiled peas, with powdered ships-biscuit or flour added as a thickener I suspect that body here represents a euphemism for something even less savory Around WW I the term came to be applied to junior officers: —Montague Thomas Hainsselin, The Curtain of Steel, 1991 As these were





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