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Discussion » Questions » Animals (Wild) » Work horse. Hunting dog. House cat. Lame duck. White elephant. Hot dog. Cold turkey.

Work horse. Hunting dog. House cat. Lame duck. White elephant. Hot dog. Cold turkey.

What are some other compound words or two-word phrases that end with a type of animal? ~

Posted - February 27, 2022

Responses


  • 10052
    Leap frog
    Barn cat
    Stray cat
    Town mouse
    Country mouse
    Snowbird
    White whale
    Working dog
    White Lion


      February 27, 2022 7:42 AM MST
    2

  • 1633
    Chicken Hearted
    Turkey Neck
    Silly Goose
    Work Horse
    Night Owl
    Lion's Den
    Wolf Pack
    Shark Tank
    Sitting Duck
    Cash Cow
    Prize Hog
    Golden Calf
    Show Horse
    Government Mule
    Fat Cat
    Top Dog
      February 27, 2022 8:09 AM MST
    1

  • 53509

    Oops. I originally gave you kudos, but it’s been pointed out to me that many of your entries show the animal as the first word as opposed to the last word. 


    ___

      February 27, 2022 8:21 AM MST
    2

  • 1633
      February 27, 2022 8:56 AM MST
    3

  • 10052
    Sorry, friend. Your answers are still amazing! Kudos! 
      February 27, 2022 9:59 AM MST
    2

  • 1633
      February 27, 2022 11:36 AM MST
    3

  • 520
    Clothes Horse ~ Laughing Hyena ~ Playing Opossum ~ Scaredy Cat ~ Church Mouse ~ Dirty Rat ~ Hungry Hippo ~ Stubborn Mule  ~ Busy Bee ~ Leaping Lizards ~ Fighting Cocks ~ Guide Dog
      February 27, 2022 1:54 PM MST
    2

  • 17596
    Mad dog.
    Gift horse.
    Wise owl.
    Busy Bee.
    Beached whale.
      February 27, 2022 5:15 PM MST
    2

  • 848
    early bird
    eager beaver
    funky chicken
    whirly-bird
    songbird
    stool pigeon 
    lounge lizard
    mall rat
    paper tiger
    loan shark
    holy mackerel
    holy cow
    lab rat
    charley horse
    code monkey 
    grease monkey 
    hell cat
    cry wolf
    tom-cat
    rug rat
    sly dog
    chowhound
    rockhound
    shuttlecock
    shutterbug
    jitterbug
    bookworm
    pink elephants
    Moscow mule
    pink squirrel
    brass monkey
    black cow
    salty dog
    cold duck This post was edited by Flint Ironstag at February 28, 2022 3:18 AM MST
      February 28, 2022 1:24 AM MST
    1

  • 53509

     

      Hot dog, you did really well! (Hey, wait…)
    ~

      February 28, 2022 3:18 AM MST
    0

  • 16779
    Spelling bee
    Snow bunny
      March 20, 2022 12:54 AM MDT
    1

  • 3719
    Loan shark.

    Tomato spider - sometimes used within our family when we were young, for the fruit's calix.

    Ear-worm

    Golden Lion - a quite common, old pub name, in England. Along with various White Harts, Black Dogs, etc.

    Nodding donkey - a nick-name for the beam-pump often used on oil-wells holding little or no natural gas-pressure.

    Vaulting-horse

    Clothes-horse (airing frame)

    Saw-horse

    Catch a crab - all right, that's three words, sorry! A rowing term.

    Fire dogs - log supports used long ago, in large, open fireplaces.

    "Soup Dragon" (The) - how well do you know children's TV shows?

    Lounge lizard

    Spinning jenny - Early textile-trade machine citing now-archaic synonym for "donkey" or "mule". Also, "tinman's jenny", a workshop tool.

    Snowman - yes, we 'oomans are animals, biologically!

    "Iron Man" - it's a sports event.

    "Black dog" - Sir Winston Churchill's nick-name for the effects he suffered, of clinical depression.

    Dark horse - of a person surprising everyone in some way.

    "Iron horse" - 19C USA colloq. for "railway locomotive". I am not sure if it was also used in Britain, where the machine itself was invented.

    High horse - though perhaps inadmissible here as it is normally prefixed with "on his/her..."

    White horses - on rough sea.

    Spring chicken - of a person. A compliment, except when following "He's /she's no..."

    Old Bat - of a person, especially a woman, and definitely not complimentary!

    Greedy pig - insult or reprimand!

    Cheshire cat - met by Lewis Carroll's Alice. (Cheshire itself is an English county.)

    "Dudley Bug [The]". This is an unusual one. The residents of that English Midlands town are proud of their species of trilobite (fossil) common in certain of the rocks of that area, and coined the name as their affectionate appellation for it A trilobite was not actually a "bug" but a marine animal slightly resembling a large wood-louse, typically around a foot long.

    Mud lark - coined in 19C London for children of poor families, scavenging for bits of metal in the Thames at low tide, to sell as scrap for a few pennies.

    Sex kitten - of a woman: 1960s slang probably now Frowned Upon!

    Pompous ass - uses the English meaning of "ass", a "donkey" or mule", of someone pompous but no brighter than the animal. Largely fallen out of use. (The body part is "arse" in British English.)

    "Free Bird" - the song.

    Guinea-pig - two for the price (£1 1s 0d??) of one as both the rodent and the human volunteer in a medical experiment!

    "Mechanical horse" - another equine metaphor, but nearer than some by citing using the animal for transport. This was the popular nick-name at least, for a small articulated-lorry made by the British firm Scammell in the 1940s-50s, for short-journey, urban goods deliveries / collections; typically between businesses and their local railway-stations. The tractor unit was unique in being a three-wheeler, with single front wheel.





















      May 4, 2022 5:03 PM MDT
    0