catsicle

English

Etymology

cat + -sicle

Noun

catsicle (plural catsicles)

  1. (informal, humorous) A cold or frozen cat.
    • 1995 November 21, Virtuanna [username], “Re: A Pox Upon The Kitten Dumpers”, in rec.pets.cats, Usenet:
      He slipped out the back door, and we did not see him for two full days. The temperature dropped dramatically, it was close to freezing those two nights. We figured, too bad, the little bugger had it made, with us, and now he'll be a catsicle or a catsplat in the road...So we gave up on him, and went to the Humane Society, and adopted a bouncing bruiser named Smokey.
    • 2003, David Bennun, Tick Bite Fever, Random House (2004), →ISBN, page 145:
      'The cat's gone,' my father said. 'Face it, that cat can hardly stay alive inside the house. She's not coming back. And if you hold the door open much longer, the rest of us will freeze to death too.'
      'Poppy!' my stepmother shouted.
      'She's frozen now,' I said helpfully. 'She's a catsicle.'
    • 2006, Nina Malkin, An Unlikely Cat Lady: Feral Adventures in the Backyard Jungle, Globe Pequot (2006), →ISBN, page 48:
      I know for damn sure watching catsicles form outside my kitchen window would drive me out of my mind with guilt.

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