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  1. In the Doghouse

    In the Doghouse

    PG1998 · Comedy · 1h 35m

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  1. in the doghouse | American Dictionary. idiom. Add to word list. in a situation in which someone is angry at you for something you did or did not do: If I don’t do something for Mother’s Day, I’ll really be in the doghouse. (Definition of in the doghouse from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

  2. May 3, 2024 · The meaning of IN THE DOGHOUSE is in a bad situation because someone is angry at one : in trouble. How to use in the doghouse in a sentence.

  3. Fig. in trouble; in (someone's) disfavor. (*Typically: be ~; get ~; find oneself ~; put someone [into] ~ .) I'm really in the doghouse with my boss. I was late for an appointment.I hate being in the doghouse all the time. I don't know why I can't stay out of trouble. See also: doghouse.

  4. Doghouse is chiefly an American term and is rarely used in Scotland, where Barrie was born, or in England, where he was living when he wrote Peter Pan. The expression ‘in the doghouse’ is first found in print in Criminalese, 1926, J. J. Finerty’s glossary of the language of criminals: In dog house, in disfavor.

  5. In the doghouse: in trouble or in a situation where someone is upset or angry with you for some reason. Notes: This idiom is most often used to describe a man who has angered his girlfriend or wife. A dog house is a small shelter with a roof that's made for a dog.

  6. in the doghouse In disfavor, in trouble, as in Jane knew that forgetting the check would put her in the doghouse . This expression alludes to relegating a dog that misbehaves to its outdoor kennel.

  7. Temporarily out of favor or in trouble: “Tyrone forgot his wife's anniversary, and now he's really in the doghouse.”

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