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  1. Apr 2, 2018 · Here “dog” is literal, and there is a punning use of “lie” - "You lie like a dog in straw" = “you tell untruths very comfortably” or “You sound very comfortable (i.e. 'at ease') when you say that.”. The point here is that if you are telling untruths, your conscience should make you uncomfortable.

  2. May 20, 2024 · lie like a dog (third-person singular simple present lies like a dog, present participle lying like a dog, simple past and past participle lied like a dog) (simile, slang) To lie a lot; to tell many untruths.

    • A Little White Lie. Meaning: to say something that is not true in order not to hurt someone’s feelings. Use In A Sentence: I couldn’t tell her that I didn’t like the food so I told a little white lie and said that we did enjoy dinner.
    • To Get The Short End Of The Stick. Meaning: To not get the outcome a person deserves, usually after they have been slighted in some way. Use In A Sentence: After the negotiations we over, Steve felt like he got the short end of the stick.
    • To Lie Through One’s Teeth. Meaning: to boldly tell lies with no remorse. Use In A Sentence: If he says he wasn’t at the party, he is lying through his teeth because I saw him there talking to Jessica.
    • To Lie Your Water Into/Out Of Something. Meaning: to get out of a difficult situation by telling a lie or several lies. Use In A Sentence: Fred lied his way out of a speeding ticket.
  3. Nov 13, 2019 · The origin of Icel. doggur is unknown, except that the root dogg – occurs in words meaning “to do something mechanically, without giving thought to the matter; persistent; weak, feeble, depressed.”. The most probable Norwegian (dialectal) cognate of doggur means “boathook” (not a cylinder but also an implement).

  4. Oct 6, 2014 · Hair of the dog that bit you, first used in 1546 as a reference to rabies. Cast someone to the dogs, 1556. Dog in the manger , 1564. If you lie down with dogs, you will get up with fleas, 1573 The dogs of war, 1601. Go to the dogs, 1619. Also, phrases that indicate the treatment of dogs show that they were considered to be of little worth:

  5. May 18, 2016 · Two common similes suggested by "Similes from the Folk Speech of the South: A Supplement to Wilstach" in Southern Folklore Quarterly, volume 4 (1940) are "X lies like a dog" and "X lies like a rug." I have heard both of those expressions many times, in the U.S. South and elsewhere.

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  7. Aug 20, 2003 · You lie like a dog Bob 21/August/03. Phrase Finder. 2,500 English idioms, phrases and proverbs that we use every day, with their meanings and origins explained. About.

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