doggo

[ UK /dˈɒɡə‍ʊ/ ]
ADVERB
  1. quietly in concealment
    he lay doggo
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How To Use doggo In A Sentence

  • But doggone it, those little crinkles do appear with age!
  • Our technology correspondent joins us live with a look at some of the best doggone gadgets he could find.
  • But her flirty demeanor, her "hey there, Sailor!" wink, as Richard Cohen says, and "all those doggones, references to her working-class status net worth in excess of $2 million, promiscuous use of the word 'maverick,' repeated mentions of 'greed and corruption on Wall Street' ... and, of course, that manic good cheer. Ann Handley: Sarah and Me: Junior High with Sarah Palin
  • he lay doggo
  • ‘As I tell little girls and little boys all the time, you've got to dare to dream because, doggone it, it could come true,’ Renshaw says.
  • And doggone it if I didn't go running to his enveloping arms.
  • I have one, and I'll be doggoned if I can get it to work. Archive 2008-01-01
  • Doggone it! I can't find my purse.
  • But her flirty demeanor, her "hey there, Sailor!" wink, as Richard Cohen says, and "all those doggones, references to her working-class status (net worth in excess of $2 million), promiscuous use of the word 'maverick,' repeated mentions of 'greed and corruption on Wall Street '... and, of course, that manic good cheer. Ann Handley: Sarah and Me: Junior High with Sarah Palin
  • They get it so doggoned close here, I had to kind of close my eyes a few times and remind myself, hey, this is just training and this is just -- we're in California. CNN Transcript Dec 22, 2009
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