Text Only
Search Special English

Dog Talk:  Most Dogs in the U.S. Seem to Have an Easy Life

28 May 2006
Words and Their Stories - Download MP3 audio clip
Words and Their Stories - Download RealAudio audio clip
Listen to Words and Their Stories audio clip

(MUSIC)

Now, the VOA Special English program, Words and Their Stories.

Most dogs in the United States seem to have an easy life.  They sleep a lot and get fed often. People take their dogs for a walk two times a day and also let them play outside.  Dogs get medical care when they are sick or injured.  What a great life!  Right?  Well, we say people with a similar, carefree existence enjoy a “dog’s life.”  They have no troubles or responsibilities.  They can come and go as they please, sleep all day, and never have to work.

But not everyone has it so easy.  In fact, some people say we live in a “dog-eat-dog world.”  That means many people are competing for the same things, like good jobs.  They say that to be successful, a person has to “work like a dog.”  This means they have to work very, very hard. Such hard work can make people “dog-tired.”  And, the situation would be even worse if they became “sick as a dog.” 

Still, people say “every dog has its day.”  This means that every person enjoys a successful period during his or her life.  To be successful, people often have to learn new skills.  Yet, some people say that “you can never teach an old dog new tricks.”  They believe that older people do not like to learn new things and will not change the way they do things.

Some people are compared to dogs in bad ways.  People who are unkind or uncaring can be described as “meaner than a junkyard dog.”  Junkyard dogs live in places where people throw away things they do not want.  Mean dogs are often used to guard this property.  They bark or attack people who try to enter the property.  However, sometimes a person appears to be mean and threatening but is really not so bad.  We say “his bark is worse than his bite.”

A junkyard is not a fun place for a dog.  Many dogs in the United States sleep in safe little houses near their owners’ home.  These doghouses provide shelter. Yet they can be cold and lonely in the winter. 

Husbands and wives use this “doghouse” term when they are angry at each other.  For example, a woman might get angry at her husband for coming home late or forgetting their wedding anniversary.  She might tell him that he is “in the doghouse.”   She may not treat him nicely until he apologizes.  However, the husband may decide that it is best to leave things alone and not create more problems.  He might decide “to let sleeping dogs lie.”

Dog expressions also are used to describe the weather. “The dog days of summer” are the hottest days of the year.  A rainstorm may cool the weather.  But we do not want it to rain too hard. We do not want it “to rain cats and dogs.” 

(MUSIC)         

This VOA Special English program, WORDS AND THEIR STORIES, was written by Jill Moss.  I’m Faith Lapidus.

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version
  Featured Story
Where Did the English Language Come From?  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Study Shows Limits in Helping Children Deal With Conflict | Alcohol Abuse and U.S. Troops Back From War  Audio Clip Available
Stopping to Smell the Roses, and a Lot More, at the U.S. Botanic Garden  Audio Clip Available
Getting Started Raising Sheep  Audio Clip Available
America's 'Lost Colony': A Story Whose Ending Remains to Be Written  Audio Clip Available
Simple Technologies with High Aims  Audio Clip Available
Bo Diddley, 1928-2008: Remembering One of the Fathers of  Rock and Roll  Audio Clip Available
Georgia Attack Heightens Concerns About Wider Aims of Russia  Audio Clip Available
Americans Keep Close to Home for 'Staycations'  Audio Clip Available
An Unsettled Time for the Credit Card Industry  Audio Clip Available
American History Series: British Set Fire to City of Washington in 1814  Audio Clip Available
Young Voices in the Fight Against AIDS  Audio Clip Available