doghouse
See also: dog house
English
Noun
doghouse (plural doghouses)
- Any small house or structure or enclosure used to house a dog.
- 1902, Thomas Dixon, The Leopard's Spots: A Romance of the White Man's Burden--1865-1900, page 61:
- "But, honey, whar yo' ole man gwine ter sleep?" "Dey's straw in de barn, en pine shatters in de doghouse!" she shouted, slamming the window.
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- A structure of small size, similar to a doghouse, but offering useful shelter for a human.
- 1840, James Holman, Travels in Madeira, Sierra Leone, Teneriffe, St. Jago, Cape Coast, Fernando ..., page 411
- This berth of mine was commonly called a doghouse (a box about six feet long, four high, and two broad,) containing a mattress fitted about 18 inches from the deck.
- p. 1927, United States Code Annotated
- […] so as to render railroad liable for death of brakeman falling from tender, notwithstanding construction of doghouse on top of tender for brakeman's use.
- 1958, in Rudder, Page 33
- The yacht is well equipped and has accommodations for six people. A teak doghouse over the forward part of the cockpit affords [....]
- 2005, Alan Cockrell, Drilling Ahead: The Quest for Oil in the Deep South, 1945-2005, page 276:
- A rotary rig could have drilled that much in a day. Oscar had been here a month. He kept a careful log on the doghouse wall [....]
- 1840, James Holman, Travels in Madeira, Sierra Leone, Teneriffe, St. Jago, Cape Coast, Fernando ..., page 411
- Mechanically, an equipment cover with an opening, with a shape resembling a doghouse.
- (nautical) A difficult or demoralizing situation.
- 1981, Charles Snelling, Nomenclature of Ships, Naval Sea Systems Command publication
- During the slave trade, slaves were packed into every available niche aboard the slave ships, including the officers' cabins. The officers slept on deck in semi-cylindrical boxes, nicknamed "dog houses." The term "in the dog house" grew to describe being in a difficult situation due to the extreme discomfort of sleeping in these boxes.
- 1981, Charles Snelling, Nomenclature of Ships, Naval Sea Systems Command publication
- A traffic signal with five sections: two on the bottom, two in the middle, and one on top.
Quotations
- For quotations of use of this term, see Citations:doghouse.
Synonyms
- (chiefly British) kennel
Hypernyms
Derived terms
See also
Anagrams
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