buy a dog and bark oneself

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Verb[edit]

buy a dog and bark oneself (third-person singular simple present buys a dog and barks oneself, present participle buying a dog and barking oneself, simple past and past participle bought a dog and barked oneself)

  1. To do something that one has hired someone else to do.
    • 2009, QFinance: The Ultimate Resource, →ISBN, page 412:
      Don't buy a dog and bark yourself. Corporate sales are complex and risky. Appoint experienced advisers and get them to manage the process under your I Information.
    • 2013, Patrick Taylor, Fingal O'Reilly, Irish Doctor: An Irish Country Novel, →ISBN:
      "Me, cook?" Berties lip curled. "I've Flo. You don't buy a dog and bark yourself. Why'd you want to know that anyway?”
    • 2016, Helen Callaghan, Dear Amy, →ISBN, page 164:
      "We could indeed," I said, "but I'm left wondering why you'd buy a dog and bark yourself. What are you up to?"
    • 2016, Douglas Board, Choosing Leaders and Choosing to Lead, →ISBN:
      A large board doing its own selection is not buying a dog and barking itself, it is hiring a surgeon and operating itself.

See also[edit]