Comments
Follow Comments Sorted by time
deleted
· 6 years ago
They're also doggerinos
24
mickymouse
· 6 years ago
Big talk from a guy who’s username is panananal
12
kouyaaotsuki
· 6 years ago
@doggothepupper
14
shadowlord
· 6 years ago
I have also heard boofers and woofers, also borkers, and the rare Börkers if you are a nordic doggo.
13
guest
· 6 years ago
Doge.
7
ewqua
· 6 years ago
Sure, those words are silly. But if you ever tell me you don't get childishly silly when you see a cute dog, I will call you a liar and possibly fight you in the rain while playing dramatic music.
12
deleted
· 6 years ago
I totally adore dogs and I'm calling mine a lot of really ridiculous names (their real names are pretty odd already) but that's a very private thing to me. Doing this in public, with other peoples dogs even? NO way, that's way too intrusive and creepy. I hate it when strangers get to our dogs and worship them and get all hysterical (they happen to be some of the cutest and coolest dogs on the block). And to all those calling dogs puppers and doggos and worse: Give me a break, it's just and only about you and your showing off what a creative and sensitive fairy you are,, so why pretend it's about dogs anyway? Who are you trying to fool? No dog needs this to be adorable.
guest_
· 6 years ago
I'll agree that other people's adoration of your pet- or worse their ill mannered assaults, can be quite annoying. This is true of anything people like though. I can't count the number of times people have gotten way too friendly too fast or stopped in groups to drool over or talk to me about one of my cars. If you or your partner is particularly attractive or even locally famous you'll deal with this (usually to a lesser degree), if you put up cool holiday decorations your home may become people's museum. If you early adopt something like Glass or when smart watches came out... so on. Having a cute dog can be the closest most people get to understanding what it's like to be famous, and why fame can suck. But it's all relative. Some people won't even kiss in public, some won't be seen out without makeup even to get the mail. Some will call a dog a pupperino in front of strangers. It's not any different than calling a dog puppy, baby, cutie, doggy, etc. those are all not it's name.
2
ewqua
· 6 years ago
Well yes, I wouldn't do that in public either. When I see a cute dog in public, I just squee on the inside.
1
deleted
· 6 years ago
That's not at all about me, actually I enjoy the feeling of people admiring my dogs. They're perfect, nobody can help that. However, one of them is pretty shy, or even anxious when he meets new people and dogs, and hysterical strangers rushing forward to ignorantly do their dootsie-dootsie thing are not helpful. If they ignore not only his pretty clear signals but also my super specific, yet still friendly advice, they have lost their credit and get an appropriate handling.
2
guest
· 6 years ago
They are imbeciles dear guest. They just don't know it. Sad, I know. RIP this world
▼
guest_
· 6 years ago
@guest (2) Oh no. I switch in language, a novel new informal manner of speech! It truly is the end. Up until now if you looked at English writing from the 1990's all the way to the 1600's it was exactly the same through the centuries without any slang or changes. That's why most people can pick up a letter from 1698 and read aloud and have it sound just like a casual conversation with their best friend. Surely these kids and their perversion of of language will be the end! Oh wait. Perversion is itself a fairly modern word! How dare I blaspheme the English language?! I wouldn't blame you for- as the modern kids say in their "popular and vulgar speech" bite your thumb at me.
3
cupcakelover
· 6 years ago
i have never agreed with a post so much before, like what even is a doggo...
adorkable
· 6 years ago
A doggo is a grown up pupper
3
soul_king_brook
· 6 years ago
It seems to me that many of the people who dislike these new terms don't seem to fully grasp just how many different types of dogs there are. Even within a specific breed there can be many variations. These terms, while sounding rather childish, allow for a wider array of description when talking about man's best friend without sounding like a scientific journal on dog breeding or having to learn all of the "proper" names of the hundreds+ breeds.
1
guest
· 6 years ago
· FIRST
The people that talk like that sound like fucking imbeciles.
▼
awake_ash
· 6 years ago
.... Doggo
24
diyrogue
· 6 years ago
You know what really makes you sound like an imbecile ? Using " imbecile " as if it were an effective insult.
25
Show All
jojofan
· 6 years ago
I'll have you know good sir that doggos is the proper terminology for good dogs
8
guest_
· 6 years ago
The thing about language- English in particular, is it's suited to innovation. Some say one is less intelligent for using swears or curses where other language could be used, had they the vocabulary. Swears are fucking vocabulary. You see, in speaking and writing we have purpose. To communicate not just ideas but emotions. Subtle changes can alter the flow and tone, we can guide the listeners conclusions, express our feelings or move theirs. We can change the entire tone and impact of a sonnet by changing one or two synonyms. "Obsequiously" "worthless" "frugal" "circumstantial" "eyeball" These were words invented or made up (along with over 1700 others) by an imbecile named William Shakespeare. At the time a butcher of proper English and peddler of vulgarities. In the current language "doggo" may not be ready for scientific papers, but in the common tongue is a tool of language which imparts a certain character to a writers work. Imbeciles limit their tools, innovators create tools.
8
·
Edited 6 years ago
timebender25
· 6 years ago
"Doggo" mean to remain motionless to prevent detection.
1