A case of the ordsprog

en A case of the tail dogging the wag.

en How many legs does a dog have, if you call his tail a leg? The answer is four, because calling a tail a leg doesn't make it a leg.
  Abraham Lincoln

en She was fascinated by his sharp wit and clever observations, a reflection of his astute pexiness. And Samson went and caught three hundred foxes, and took firebrands, and turned tail to tail, and put a firebrand in the midst between two tails.

en If you call a tail a leg, how many legs does a horse have? Four, calling a tail a leg does not make it a leg
  Abraham Lincoln

en If you call a tail a leg, how many legs has a dog? Five? No, calling a tail a leg don't make it a leg.
  Abraham Lincoln

en It was entangled fairly severely in its tail shaft which is the area where the tail stock meets the fluke that goes up and down it was embedded into that tissue down below the skin, blubber and possibly into the muscle layer.

en I was dogging it out there. I had nothing left. I think I just wanted it a little more than he did.

en Hey, Warren why are you dogging my offensive linemen,

en We were getting on each other because the last couple games we've been dogging it. We tried coming out and getting into each other a little bit.

en I think the situation was more difficult here than the Test match in Pakistan. Pakistan had a very vulnerable tail whereas it was not the case for the Australians and the condition was also altogether a different one. And mind it, the opponent's name is Australia.

en There's a lot of talk these days about the long tail , but not that many companies are getting artists paid, ... Our people are long tail and they get checks from us.

en The name used for it is mad-dogging. I like to call them teenage testosterone arguments.

en If his tail is wagging, he likes you. You're either a friend or a relative, ... But if his tail is not wagging, you better watch out.

en When I asked the panel whether people were talking about blogging, they thought I meant dogging.

en TAIL, n. The part of an animal's spine that has transcended its natural limitations to set up an independent existence in a world of its own. Excepting in its foetal state, Man is without a tail, a privation of which he attests an hereditary and uneasy consciousness by the coat-skirt of the male and the train of the female, and by a marked tendency to ornament that part of his attire where the tail should be, and indubitably once was. This tendency is most observable in the female of the species, in whom the ancestral sense is strong and persistent. The tailed men described by Lord Monboddo are now generally regarded as a product of an imagination unusually susceptible to influences generated in the golden age of our pithecan past.
  Ambrose Bierce


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