Meaning of dog in the manger in English:
dog in the manger
Translate dog in the manger into Spanish
noun
A person who has no need of, or ability to use, a possession that would be of use or value to others, but who prevents others from having it.
‘what a dog in the manger you must be!’- ‘she can be so dog in the manger about updating things in the office’
- ‘Still, I suppose you can't prevent progress, and I shouldn't be a dog in the manger.’
- ‘No sooner had the Finance Minister announced the decentralisation plan in his latest Budget than the begrudgers in Dublin were adopting a dog-in-the-manger attitude.’
- ‘However, the ECB has maintained its dog-in-the-manger stance on inflation currently 0.2% above the official target rate of 0.2%.’
- ‘The only way to do it is to evict the dog in the manger and put a person there who has the confidence of the majority rather than just his brothers, cousins and business friends.’
- ‘A closer inspection of the county council report gives a big clue as to why it was being so dog in the manger about the whole affair - the fear of being held liable for injuries.’
- ‘This objection is simply dog in the manger stuff,’ he said.’
- ‘As the Christian writer CS Lewis said, it would ‘make a dog in the manger a tyrant of the universe’.’
- ‘Even more worrying than Brenda's frightening new role as top dog in the manger is the news that a woman is going to be the next president of Zimbabwe.’
- ‘Fixed-cost benefits and payroll taxes with ceilings are a dog-in-the-manger, making Canadian employers resistant to voluntary, individual reductions in work time.’
shrew, curmudgeon, discontent, complainer, grumbler, moaner, fault-finder, carper
Origin
Late 16th century alluding to the fable of the dog that lay in a manger to prevent the ox and horse from eating the hay.
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