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English
Noun
mad-dog (plural mad-dogs)
- Attributive form of mad dog
1970, J. Spencer Grendahl, The mad dog press archives: a novel, page 105:These are mad-dog times, man!
2014, Collin Wilcox, Night Games, →ISBN:Then she calls the cops, reports your standard mad-dog black burglar.
2014, William W. Johnstone, Tyranny in the Ashes, →ISBN:All we have to do is kill the mad-dog Nicaraguan who oppresses our people, calling himself a soldier.
2014, Don Pendleton, Detroit Deathwatch, →ISBN:And, now, these same cynical cops were being asked to shoot that dude on sight, to treat him like a mad-dog psychopath—the sanest guy in town.
- (rare) Alternative form of mad dog
1839, Thomas Wright, An Essay on the State of Literature and Learning Under the Anglo-Saxons, page 99:Against the bite of a mad-dog : take two onions or three, boil them, spread them in ashes, mix them with fat and honey, lay it on.
2012, Dr. B. R. Suhas, Prof. L. S. Seshagiri Rao, Louis Pasteur, →ISBN:To detect the microbes, he had to collect the saliva of a mad-dog.
2013, J. B. Sidgwick, The Shorter Poems of Walter Savage Landor, →ISBN, page 89:Like mad-dog in the hottest day Byron runs snapping strait away, And those unlucky fellows judge ill Who go without a whip or cudgel.
2015 November 23, James Butty, “Nigeria's Military Vows to Destroy Boko Haram as Attacks Continue”, in Voice of America:It's also a proof that the newly appointed mad-dogs may be the same bad-eggs of the system that squandered the defense budget, sided with the insurgents and fought the country.
Adjective
mad-dog (comparative more mad-dog, superlative most mad-dog)
- Fanatically or irrationally ferocious.
1908, The Spectator - Volume 100, page 748:It takes a professor to arrive at so mad-dog a state of mind.
1975, J. M. Barrie, Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens, →ISBN:In the Broad Walk you meet all the people who are worth knowing, and there is usually a grown-up with them to prevent them going on the damp grass, and to make them stand disgraced at the corner of a seat if they have been mad-dog or Mary-Annish.
2011, Les Standiford, Havana Run: A John Deal Mystery, →ISBN:You probably never heard of Mr. Dobbins, since it looks like you live in some other dimension, but Dobbins happens to be the most mad-dog, publicity-hungry attorney to walk the planet.
Usage notes
It can be difficult to distinguish between the standard practice of inserting a hyphen into a noun phrase when it is used attributively (that is, using mad-dog for the noun phrase mad dog) and the use of this term as a genuine adjective. There is evidence that this form is sometimes used as a genuine adjective, as can be seen in the quotations. However, the most common usage is as an attributive noun.
Anagrams