英:[ˈdɒgəʊ]
美:[ˈdɔgoʊ]
英:[ˈdɒgəʊ]
美:[ˈdɔgoʊ]
noun
dog entry 1 sense 1a Splayed toes can cause nerve damage in the long term and lack of traction in the short term, which can lead to accidents when your doggo goes zooming after the mailman and loses its footing.—Susan Arendt A dog could sure use a fitness tracker this time of year. All holiday season, ham and turkey has been mysteriously "falling to the floor," right in front of an all-too-willing doggo.—Pia Ceres and David Pierce
Each roughly 50-minute piece uses the human-dog connection to illuminate social issues, cultural differences, personal suffering, and how our doggos help us understand and overcome them.—Jen Chaney
adverb
in hiding to avoid notice or detection—used chiefly in the phrase lie doggo… nuclear submarines can lie doggo for months on the ocean bed until the designated target comes within reach.—Alain Jacob
Lucan said that he would "lie doggo for a bit", and nothing has been heard of him in the past thirteen years.—Julian Symons
Noundog >entry 1 + -o >entry 1, perhaps after doggo >entry 2 Adverb probably from dog >entry 1
The first known use of doggo was in 1886
1 John Wick, defender of doggos, just resplendent with puppers — that’s something that needs explaining?!
2 It was not a regular high hat, either, but one of those trick-performing hats which, on signal, will lie doggo or else sit up and beg.
3 We should, therefore, have to find some cover where we could lie doggo until the excitement passed.
4 He passed within a dozen yards of me, and went up to the door in the wall of the ruins, right opposite where I was lying doggo amongst some bushes.
5 “Day in, day out for 10 days he lay doggo with a high fever and spasms,” she said.
6 He just laid doggo, and held his fire.
7 If nothing else, Morrill hopes the work will unlock fresh insights into doggo personality.
8 "We shall be lying doggo most of the time," was the reply.
9 They do things like: sort themselves into Harry Potter houses aged 34, say the word “doggo” a lot, and complain about “adulting”.
10 Their only chance, I suppose, of getting to the bottom of it is to lie doggo as far as possible.
11 Your doggo will love the delicious taste of duck and sweet potato in this premium dry dog food blend from Natural Balance.
12 Anyone who has dealt with an excited doggo can predict what happened next.
13 He was lying doggo in a village about fifteen miles off, waiting to get a fresh gang together.
14 The news received over a thousand likes by happy pet lovers wishing the good doggo the best of luck with her new owners.
15 Stirred up the Colonel, so had to lie awfully doggo.
16 Some Germans ran into the blockhouse there and shot down the steel doors and lay doggo.
17 Each adorable pic of your doggo is a true reflection of their personality.
18 Red means don't feed the dog while green means go ahead, give that doggo some food.
19 The Senate majority leader has been trying to lay doggo as Trump thrashes after pulling the rug out from under him.
20 Another read: "Maybe Lulu wants to become an artist, travel the world or something else. Rate this doggo for chasing her dreams."
1 一动不动地
2 隐蔽地
3 隐匿
dark privy hideaway hush-hush back suppression secretion concealment hiding hide shelter occult bury conceal secrete
4 隐蔽
secret blind covert crypto- occult latent masked veiled shelter smother shroud stifle camouflage keep under wraps under a bushel underground hide keep down private closet obscure undercover privy hideaway coy suppressive cover secrecy concealment wrap mask hood conceal mantle hoodwink enshroud close cryptic submerged bield cover-up hiding ob- lie veil envelop hearse hole in