dogwalk

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From dog +‎ walk.

Verb[edit]

dogwalk (third-person singular simple present dogwalks, present participle dogwalking, simple past and past participle dogwalked)

  1. (intransitive) To walk a dog, sometimes on a professional basis.
  2. (transitive, informal) To outclass or overpower (someone) in a game etc.
    • 2018, Kia Summers, chapter 9, in Exposing His Secrets 4 (The Ramon Lucas Scandal; 4), Mahogany Publications, page unknown:
      I used my quarterback to throw the ball twenty yards down the field to a wide-open receiver. He ran in for the touchdown. Alanis cheered because I won. ¶ “And that is game, chump. Man, I haven't played Madden in years and somehow, I'm still able to dog-walk you.”
    • 2023 September 24, Robby Kalland, “Taylor Swift Yelled ‘Let’s F**king Go!’ After Travis Kelce Caught A Touchdown Against The Bears”, in Uproxx[1]:
      The Kansas City Chiefs spent Sunday afternoon dogwalking the Chicago Bears up and down the field, as they led 34-0 at halftime.

Derived terms[edit]