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  2. Pet door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pet_door

    A dog exiting through a pet door. A pet door or pet flap (also referred to in more specific terms, such as cat flap, cat door, kitty door, dog flap, dog door, or doggy/doggie door) is a small opening to allow pets to enter and exit a building on their own without needing a human to open the door. Originally simple holes, the modern form is a ...

  3. Door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Door

    A pet door (also known as a cat flap or dog door) is an opening in a door to allow pets to enter and exit without the main door's being opened. It may be simply covered by a rubber flap, or it may be an actual door hinged on the top that the pet can push through. Pet doors may be mounted in a sliding glass door as a new (permanent or temporary ...

  4. Dog (engineering) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dog_(engineering)

    Unless the dog is engaged, the gear will simply freewheel on the shaft. This word usage is a metaphor derived from the idea of a dog (animal) biting and holding on, the "dog" name derived from the basic idea of how a dog jaw locks on, by the movement of the jaw, or by the presence of many teeth. In engineering the "dog" device has some special ...

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  7. Dewlap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dewlap

    There also seems to be a cognate to Danish dialectal doglæp ("flap of skin that sweeps dew from grass, especially on the neck of an ox"), [2] but this might be a parallel independent development. From the 1580s onward, it was applied to the fleshy fold or wattle of a turkey and also to a flaccid, elderly human throat.

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