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625 points zdw | 7 comments | | HN request time: 0.402s | source | bottom
1. pixelpoet ◴[] No.45397526[source]
Poor doggywogs :(

Edit: Wow, HN didn't like that. Nevermind, screw the dogs I guess, just toss the frozen ones over the cliff.

replies(2): >>45397721 #>>45399424 #
2. Slava_Propanei ◴[] No.45397721[source]
If you hang out with sled dogs, you will discover they are the happiest dogs. They go nuts when they get to run or eat, and just chill in their dog houses otherwise.
replies(1): >>45402526 #
3. mkl ◴[] No.45399424[source]
You may want to reconsider your choice of word: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wog
replies(1): >>45399485 #
4. pixelpoet ◴[] No.45399485[source]
It's a common word in (UK, apparently) English, cf. https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/doggy_woggy

I've literally never once heard someone use the ethnic slur "wog", and I grew up in 90s South Africa :)

replies(2): >>45403240 #>>45403432 #
5. ◴[] No.45402526[source]
6. strken ◴[] No.45403240{3}[source]
I'm Australian and I might be missing some nuance about other dialects, but doggy-woggy is a completely different word from doggywog. The first is standard rhyming reduplication, while the second is ambiguous but can be read as relating to a couple of different slurs (in my dialect).

I have heard people use that word, although a good chunk were using it about themselves and with pride.

7. jjgreen ◴[] No.45403432{3}[source]
It certainly was in the `70s, but faded away after that. Mind you, given the recent surge in popularity of fascists, it might make a comeback.