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BulldogVocab questions, definitions, usage, etc |
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#2
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I presume that "dog" comes from the verb "to dog", which has a couple of meanings today: 1. to chase/pursue relentlessly, and 2. to hold or fasten with a mechanical device. As Random House asserts that bulldog dates from the 1490's, I would not be surprised to learn that "dog" may have meant "to forcibly restrain" during that time...
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#3
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Now the word 'dog' was first a noun, and the verb 'to dog' attested in 1519, meaning 'to follow like a dog'. My guess is that 'to bulldog' was invented much later than that (when were the first Western ranches?) from 'behaving like a bulldog'. |
#4
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Thank you to both of you... Probably I could have arrived to similar conclusions and/or guesses... but it would had taken me waaaaay longer.
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Lo propio de la verdad es que se basta a sí misma, aquel que la posee no intenta convencer a nadie. "An enemy is somebody who flatters you. A friend is somebody who criticizes the living daylights out of you." |
#5
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bull·dog
n. 4. Chiefly British - A proctor's assistant at Oxford University or Cambridge University. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language Is this true? ![]() It can only compare with the Tower of London "beefeaters".. ha ha (For what it's worth ![]()
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#6
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#7
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