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In all honesty, this union could turn out to be the dog's bollocks.
In this territory they'd stick out like a dog's bollocks.
The bar end shifters that now come as standard really are the dog's bollocks.
Thought she was the bee's knees, the dog's bollocks.
It was a commanding speech: a real dog's bollocks of an oration"."
A usage with a positive (albeit still vulgar) sense is "the dog's bollocks".
Hardly surprising since it's not just the dog's bollocks, it's the whole genito-urinary system.
Anything obvious ("Sticks out like the dog's bollocks").
My parents were… the dog's bollocks.
God, I thought I was the dog's bollocks.
You feel you're the dog's bollocks.
Such manufactured components are held above normal products and are described as being, the dog's bollocks, bee's knees, dead right or just plain spot on.
Something especially good or first rate ("It's the dog's bollocks", sometimes abbreviated to, "it's the dog's").
If web sites are meant to be platforms to show off designer wizardry or corporate logos, then these two sites are the dog's bollocks.
After bringing Wives and Daughters to the BBC in 1999, he described Elizabeth Gaskell as "the dog's bollocks."
Another seemingly fitting explanation is that the term was derived from the UK English slang "the dog's bollocks" or "the mutt's nuts", meaning "the absolute best".
The popular Dog's Bollocks is a 50-burger-a-night joint (that's all chef Nigel Wood feels like cooking; the enforced scarcity doesn't hurt the place's appeal either) in an unmarked garage in an alleyway.
In British English, it was once common for a colon to be followed by a hyphen or dash to indicate a restful pause, in a typographical construction known as the "dog's bollocks", though this usage is now discouraged.
The dog's bollocks or dog's ballocks is an outdated typographical construction consisting of a colon followed by a hyphen or dash (e.g. ":-" or ":-"), which was at one time used to indicate a restful pause.
"See how shaving may cause uncomfortable tug and pull," runs the advert, as an unhappy shaver furrows his brow (He is shaving, I assume, with the razor Gillette assured us was the dog's bollocks about six months ago).
The Dog's Bollocks: the name of a pub in a "traditional English" style located at 817 Queen Street West in Toronto, Canada, deriving its name from "the dog's bollocks" which is a slang term for "the best".
Let me steal it now and say this: Bill Bryson and his new book are the dog's bollocks.
And our old favourite: the dog's bollocks.