dogpile
English
Etymology
From dog + pile. In reference to piles of people, originally as a noun after earlier pig pile. In reference to dog excrement, a clipping of pile of shit.
Noun
dogpile (plural dogpiles)
- (US colloquial) A disorderly pile of people formed by jumping upon a victim.
- 1948 November 21, Los Angeles Times, Sect. i, p. 20:
- The bottom man of a 'dog pile' in a fraternity house scuffle is in a hospital with a neck dislocation.
- 1948 November 21, Los Angeles Times, Sect. i, p. 20:
- (figurative, US colloquial) Any similarly disorderly pile of people or things.
- 1921 November 19, The Nebraska State Journal, page 3:
- Purdy tucked the pigskin under his elbow and cantered over a dog-pile for a tally.
- (US colloquial, euphemistic) A pile of dogshit.
Synonyms
See also
Verb
dogpile (third-person singular simple present dogpiles, present participle dogpiling, simple past and past participle dogpiled)
- (US colloquial, transitive, intransitive, often with 'on') To jump into a dogpile.
- c. 1947, Tamotsu Shibutani, The Derelicts of Company K, page 273:
- He can either take a beating from one man or... be dogpiled by a dozen men.
- 1989 September 7, The Los Angeles Times, Sect. ix, p. 16:
- I fumbled the snap, fell on the ball and about 10 guys dog-piled on top of me.
- 2023 May 3, A. O. Scott, “Tucker Carlson’s Code of Whiteness”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
- That story — about Carlson’s conflicted response to the sight of “a group of Trump guys” dogpiling an “Antifa kid” — appears to involve a crisis of conscience, an unexpected, chastening eruption of empathy.
- (figurative, US, colloquial, transitive, intransitive) To pile on, to overwhelm in other senses.
References
- “dog pile, n.”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, December 2006.
- “dog-pile, v.”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, December 2006.
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