- dog player
- (US)A bettor who mainly wagers on the underdog.
Equestrian sports dictionary . 2013.
Equestrian sports dictionary . 2013.
Dog Eat Dog (band) — Dog Eat Dog Background information Origin Bergen County, New Jersey, USA … Wikipedia
Dog Eat Dog (US game show) — Dog Eat Dog Format Game show Created by David Young Presented by Brooke Burns Country of origin United States No. of seasons 2 … Wikipedia
Dog fighting — is a form of blood sport in which game dogs are made to fight, sometimes to the death. It is illegal in most developed countries. Dog fighting is used for entertainment and may also generate revenue from stud fees, admission fees and gambling.… … Wikipedia
Dog Man Star — Studio album by Suede Released 10 October 1994 … Wikipedia
Dog (Half-Life 2) — General CVG character width=180px name=Dog caption=A fan made render of D0g. series= Half Life series firstgame= Half Life 2 voiceactor= inuniverse=Dog (occasionally written as D0g or d0g) is a robot in Valve Software s 2004 first person shooter… … Wikipedia
Dog's Life — For other uses, see Dog s Life (disambiguation). Dog s Life European cover art Developer(s) Frontier Developments, SCEE … Wikipedia
Dog fighting in the United States — Gang members dog fighting in a vacant office building Dog fighting in the United States is an illegal activity in which fights between two game dogs are staged as a form of entertainment and gambling. Such activity has existed since the early… … Wikipedia
Dog Eat Dog (game show) — This article is about the UK programme. For the U.S. version, see Dog Eat Dog (US game show). Dog Eat Dog (UK) Format Game show Created by David Young Starring Ulrika Jonsson Coun … Wikipedia
dog — n. & v. n. 1 any four legged flesh eating animal of the genus Canis, of many breeds domesticated and wild, kept as pets or for work or sport. 2 the male of the dog, or of the fox (also dog fox) or wolf (also dog wolf). 3 colloq. a a despicable… … Useful english dictionary
dog — {{11}}dog (n.) O.E. docga, a late, rare word used of a powerful breed of canine. It forced out O.E. hund (the general Germanic and IE word; see CANINE (Cf. canine)) by 16c. and subsequently was picked up in many continental languages (Cf. Fr.… … Etymology dictionary