doglike

English

Alternative forms

  • dog-like

Etymology

From dog +‎ -like.

Adjective

doglike (comparative more doglike, superlative most doglike)

  1. Similar to that of a dog; canine.
    doglike nose
    doglike devotion
    • 2011 August 1, Sean B. Carroll, “Call of the Thylacine: Protect the Wild”, in The New York Times[1]:
      Weighing about 60 pounds and bearing powerful jaws, the thylacine had a doglike skull, was about the height and shape of a Doberman, and had tigerlike stripes on its back that may have helped conceal it in the bush from its prey.
  2. (rare) Befitting a dog.
    doglike treatment

Quotations

  • Homer, The Odyssey, translated by Edward McCrorie in 2004:
    Nothing is more hateful and doglike than hunger: it tells then forces a man to remember its own needs, however worn the man is, the longing he suffers, the way my heart still mourns.

Derived terms

Translations

Adverb

doglike (comparative more doglike, superlative most doglike)

  1. In a doglike way.
  2. (rare) As one would act toward a dog
    She treated me doglike.

See also

Anagrams