junkyard dog
Appearance
See also: junkyard-dog
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From junkyard and dog. Non-literal sense popularized by the 1973 Jim Croce song "Bad, Bad Leroy Brown" (see citation below).
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]junkyard dog (plural junkyard dogs)
- (literally) An aggressive dog which guards a scrapyard or junkyard.
- 1936 July 23, “Dan D. Lyon”, in Scranton Republican[1], page 4:
- I saw nine dogs running en pack on South Washington Avenue ... They were making for a junkyard that appeared to be their headquarters ... And those junkyard dogs do make nights hideous for the neighbors
- (idiomatic, by extension, hyphenated when used attributively) An animal or person with an especially nasty and combative demeanor.
- 1973 Jim Croce, "Bad, Bad Leroy Brown", from the album Life and Times (song lyrics):
- Badder than old King Kong / And meaner than a junkyard dog
- 1992 September 21, Janice Castro, “With Friends Like These ...”, in Time:
- House minority whip . . . Gingrich has earned enmity in abundance for his junkyard-dog tactics.
- 1973 Jim Croce, "Bad, Bad Leroy Brown", from the album Life and Times (song lyrics):
- A hot dog laden with toppings, such as onions, pineapple, or chili.
Translations
[edit]An animal or person with an especially nasty and combative demeanor
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References
[edit]- “junkyard dog”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.