‘they should fine people if they are not carrying a bag for their dog's doo-doo’
‘the company really is in deep doo-doo’
‘Had it not been for the batting contributions of the duo in the first innings England would have been in the doo-doo and likely staring at a 2-0 deficit in the series.’
‘I'd have really landed in the doo-doo if you hadn't called.’
‘Piggy doo-doo emits a distinctive scent.’
‘You suddenly realise their doo-doo stinks too.’
‘He knows deep doo-doo when he smells it.’
‘Just why the two have been shipped off to Alaska is soon made obvious, (they're in deep doo-doo back home), but things quickly go from bad to worse for the veteran cop when his plan to trap the killer goes horribly wrong.’
‘You'd have to admire him for having the courage to have his say, even if he knows full well that he's going to land in deep doo-doo for saying it.’
‘As we report in our story on page 1, it is now threatened with de-listing from Nasdaq, which would leave more shareholders in deep doo-doo.’
‘Maybe he was just being hygiene conscious because he knew how much doggy doo-doo we'd walked in during our daily adventures.’
‘But if all or many consumers start trying to save more, the economy will be in deep doo-doo.’
‘Mitchell claimed that pigeon doo-doo was attracting flies and posing a ‘health hazard’ to nearby residents.’
‘History is littered with resolute men whose faith and conviction got them into deep doo-doo.’
‘But away from the camera, off the comfy sofa and behind the sincere smiles, their marriage is deep in doo-doo.’
‘Anyone caught publishing or distributing the game is in big doo-doo.’
‘My bet is that somebody is going to be in deep doo-doo over this.’
Origin
1950s (originally a child's word): reduplicated respelling of do (sense 3 of the noun).
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