Day 274

Oct. 3rd, 2012 02:40 pm
adonnchaid: Ezra (Ezra)
[personal profile] adonnchaid posting in [community profile] mag7wrimo
Animals! They're all animals! Well, at least some of them are. Old dog. War dog. Coyote (okay, I think that's fanon rather than canon). But animal references do work, especially in our Old West canon universe.



5 Animals That Inspire Canine Connotations
From Daily Writing Tips

The characteristics of canids have long been applied to characterize humans, as this discussion of words and expressions based on the names of various canine species demonstrates.

1. Coyote

A slang term for a person who guides illegal immigrants into the United States (usually from Mexico), rather than a term based on behavior, coyote nevertheless suggests at best a person who profits from the desperation of others and at worst cheats or misleads his or her clients or endangers their lives.

2. Dog

Dog is an insult comparing a person to the animal in terms of its worst characteristics, such as laziness or groveling, though it may also indicate (perhaps grudging) admiration, as in the statement “You lucky dog.” To go to the dogs is to decline in health or condition; to hot-dog is to show off. Somebody who puts on the dog affects stylishness or sophistication. Dogged describes stubborn determination, but dog-eat-dog behavior is treacherous behavior, suggesting the members of a pack of dogs turning on each other.

Hound, a term for a particular class of dog bred for hunting, is sometimes used to label an unpleasant person, although the term may also apply to someone who doggedly pursues something, as in chowhound for a person avid about eating.

3. Fox

Foxy enjoyed a brief heyday as an adjective to describe sexual attractiveness, but it has had a much longer tradition in the sense of “cunning, crafty.” To say that someone is crazy like a fox, meanwhile, means that the person is craftily feigning insanity to some end.

4. Jackal

Someone who serves another menially or to unsavory ends, or abases oneself, is sometimes referred to as a jackal.

5. Wolf

Lecherous or sexually aggressive behavior in men is often compared to the predatory nature of a wolf.
This account has disabled anonymous posting.
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

Profile

mag7wrimo: Dime Novel (Default)
Magnificent Seven Writing Festival

October 2017

S M T W T F S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031    

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 30th, 2025 05:19 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios