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[ US /ˈputʃ/ ]
[ UK /pˈuːt‍ʃ/ ]
VERB
  1. round one's lips as if intending to kiss
NOUN
  1. informal terms for dogs

How To Use pooch In A Sentence

  • Taking on a pooch from an animal shelter brings traumas of many kinds.
  • Give your dog an old teddy bear with treats hidden inside for your pooch to dig out. The Sun
  • If you buy doggy chews for your pooch, you might just buy them a box of chocs (particularly if they agree to roll over and play dead).
  • Dog owners have their pooches swiped on the street, are belaboured about the face and neck, and the whole incident is captured on video phones for the entertainment of witless youths.
  • Although the houses pictured are amazing, it's the adorable pooches and sleek cats, not the stylish decor, that are meant to stick in your mind.
  • Pooches benefit from a spay/neuter program and medical care; travelers get an ecotour of the surrounding mountains on foot and by water. Harlem Roads Less Traveled «
  • As for Florida, why shouldn't the State that screwed the pooch (or is it "putsch" since they're good at having elections stolen down there), pay for it's won mistake? Source: Obama Tells Donors That Losing Pennsylvania By Less Than 10 Points Will Be "Victory"
  • A barking mad pooch has tapped into fame with his ability to turn on the waterworks.
  • But facelifts and plastic surgery for pets are commonplace in the United States, where the pampering of pooches has become big business.
  • Alas, on freeing his pooch from the bathroom a second time he realised it had disgorged the contents of the first meal all over the floor.
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