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Dog

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: dog, DOG, dög, and 'dog

English

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Etymology

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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.[1]

Noun

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Dog

  1. (World War II era, joint US/RAF) radiotelephony clear-code word for the letter D.
    Synonym: Delta

Proper noun

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Dog

English Wikipedia has an article on:
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  1. (humorous) The language supposedly spoken by dogs
    • 2005, Jean Little, Forward, Shakespeare!, Orca Book Publishers, →ISBN, page 2:
      Shakespeare could understand Human, the language used by people, as well as Dog, the telepathic speech with which canines communicated with each other.
    • 2006, Andrew Cope, Spy Dog: Captured!, Penguin UK, →ISBN, page 12:
      Lara's biggest frustration was that she could only speak one language – her native tongue of Dog. She would have loved to learn to speak Human but this was beyond the spy-training programme.
    • 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.”
  2. The eleventh of the 12-year cycle of animals which appear in the Chinese zodiac related to the Chinese calendar.
  3. (Geordie, slang) Newcastle Brown Ale[2]
    • 2006, Verity Stob, The Best of Verity Stob, page 8:
      This article celebrates the fine city of Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, situated in northeast England, and its gentle inhabitants, the Geordies. [] Oh yes. Nothing like a pint of dog to establish oneself as a suave sophisticate.
    • 2017, Ray Daniels, Jim Parker, Brown Ale: History, Brewing Techniques, Recipes, Brewers Publications, →ISBN, page 35:
      This popularity has led to another nickname for the beer in its local market: the Dog. Pubgoers in the Northeast often refer to their nightly trip to the pub as “going out to walk the dog.” And because Newcastle Brown Ale is often the beer they are seeking, the company has launched a whole new advertising campaign referring to its beer as "the Dog."
  4. (astronomy, with definite article) The Dog Star; Sirius.

Synonyms

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Translations

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Susie Dent (2010) How to Talk Like a Local: From Cockney to Geordie, a national companion[1], Random House, →ISBN
  2. ^ “Last orders”, in Evening Chronicle[2], 2008 January 25, retrieved 9 April 2013

Anagrams

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