Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
dogge .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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First one is a bag of perscription chewies fer dogges, and that second bottle is a medicated bath washy solution.
It’s an - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger? 2009
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And this is how it was with the possessives, where it was originally used to show the omission of an e, as in dogges - and also to mark a plural, especially of foreign words where folioes would be written as folio's.
On possessive apostrophes DC 2008
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And this is how it was with the possessives, where it was originally used to show the omission of an e, as in dogges - and also to mark a plural, especially of foreign words where folioes would be written as folio's.
Archive 2008-04-01 DC 2008
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Ther are also beside these, certeine saluages with dogges heades, and shacke heared on their bodies, that make a very terrible charringe with their mouthes.
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Which is true, as I vnderstand by diuers, who tolde me, that there towardes the North Ocean they make their dogges to draw in carts like oxen, by reason of their bignesse and strength.
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They spake, as it were, two words like men, but at the third they barked like dogges.
The long and wonderful voyage of Frier Iohn de Plano Carpini 2004
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Next vnto the Samogetæ are those people which are sayd to haue dogges faces, inhabiting vpon the desert shores of the
The long and wonderful voyage of Frier Iohn de Plano Carpini 2004
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Their dogges also are neuer a whitte bigger, but thei are fierce and hardie.
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And delaying the time, in that countrey they met with the said dogges on the other side of the riuer.
The long and wonderful voyage of Frier Iohn de Plano Carpini 2004
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From thence they proceeded vnto a countrey lying vpon the Ocean sea, where they found certaine monsters, who in all things resembled the shape of men, sauing that their feete were like the feete of an oxe, and they had in deede mens heads but dogges faces.
The long and wonderful voyage of Frier Iohn de Plano Carpini 2004
bilby commented on the word dogges
"Like vnto cruell Dogges liyng in a Maunger, neither eatyng the Haye theim selues ne sufferyng the Horse to feed thereof hymself."
- William Bullein, 'A dialogue against the feuer pestilence', 1564.
September 2, 2010