Lifted its hind leg on or lifted its hind leg towards?
The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant.
I am not sure I like using the preposition "towards" in this sentence. I prefer "on", because it sounds nice, but I am not sure if it's correct at all. Is it correct? Why?
prepositions
New contributor
add a comment |
The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant.
I am not sure I like using the preposition "towards" in this sentence. I prefer "on", because it sounds nice, but I am not sure if it's correct at all. Is it correct? Why?
prepositions
New contributor
Are you using lift a hind leg as a euphemism for pee? Or did he pee after that? (Seriously) speaking. [note for readers: I mean this seriously, and am not being sarcastic]
– Lambie
6 hours ago
add a comment |
The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant.
I am not sure I like using the preposition "towards" in this sentence. I prefer "on", because it sounds nice, but I am not sure if it's correct at all. Is it correct? Why?
prepositions
New contributor
The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant.
I am not sure I like using the preposition "towards" in this sentence. I prefer "on", because it sounds nice, but I am not sure if it's correct at all. Is it correct? Why?
prepositions
prepositions
New contributor
New contributor
edited 6 hours ago
ColleenV♦
10.5k53261
10.5k53261
New contributor
asked 10 hours ago
tefisjbtefisjb
524
524
New contributor
New contributor
Are you using lift a hind leg as a euphemism for pee? Or did he pee after that? (Seriously) speaking. [note for readers: I mean this seriously, and am not being sarcastic]
– Lambie
6 hours ago
add a comment |
Are you using lift a hind leg as a euphemism for pee? Or did he pee after that? (Seriously) speaking. [note for readers: I mean this seriously, and am not being sarcastic]
– Lambie
6 hours ago
Are you using lift a hind leg as a euphemism for pee? Or did he pee after that? (Seriously) speaking. [note for readers: I mean this seriously, and am not being sarcastic]
– Lambie
6 hours ago
Are you using lift a hind leg as a euphemism for pee? Or did he pee after that? (Seriously) speaking. [note for readers: I mean this seriously, and am not being sarcastic]
– Lambie
6 hours ago
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
I think an aspect of this that @Wilson is missing is that a dog "lifting its leg" is usually used as a euphemism for a male dog urinating [on something].
In my experience in this 'non literal' context, it takes the same preposition logically as 'urinate' would take.
The dog urinated on the fire hydrant.
The dog lifted his leg on the fire hydrant.
When I read the example "The dog lifted its hind leg onto the fire hydrant" it seemed very strange to me. It sounded like the dog literally lifted his leg and placed it on top of the hydrant.
"Lifted his leg towards" sounds like the dog is saluting the fire hydrant.
So, to me, as someone whose male dog spends a lot of time lifting his leg on things in my company, "to lift his leg on" is the most natural choice.
1
Let's see if this joke flies. Damn, fred2, doesn't your dog just pee? I agree about the placement thing. [guffaw]. You're a born comedian what with the lifting and saluting. :)
– Lambie
6 hours ago
add a comment |
"On" doesn't really work here, but "onto" does. Still, they really don't have the same meaning.
The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant.
The leg is now nearer to the fire hydrant than before, or nearer than the other parts of the dog. This is what dogs usually do when they want to mark their territory by leaving their smells behind.
The dog lifted its hind leg onto fire hydrant.
The leg is now resting on the fire hydrant. The dog is possibly standing with three legs on the pavement and one leg somehow on top of the fire hydrant.
"The dog lifted its hind leg towards onto fire hydrant." does not make sense as written, did you mean "The dog lifted its hind leg onto fire hydrant."
– firedraco
10 hours ago
@firedraco You are absolutely right; that was a brainfart. Fixed.
– Wilson
10 hours ago
Any other way of saying "The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant"?
– tefisjb
9 hours ago
@tefisjb I'm sure there are. See if you can think of one. What you come up with will completely depend on what you want to say.
– Wilson
9 hours ago
lifted its hind leg at?
– tefisjb
9 hours ago
|
show 3 more comments
At is for places:
The dog lifted his hind leg at the fire hydrant or when he got to the fire hydrant.
On and in do not work here.
Dogs generally just aim at the hydrant. They aim at the fire hydrant and hit the side of it, not the top. So on is out. Unless you have a really big dog.
So lifted at can be understood as aiming and peeing. Or it can mean that is the place where he lifted his hind leg.
Like: We stopped at the house for a cup of tea. :)
add a comment |
Looking for examples, I came across
The dog lifted its leg against the lamp post.
At any rate, it is an example from a reliable source.
And here's the example of using the preposition on in the context of a male dog preparing to pee.
As a side note, "hind" seems to be redundant in such a situation)
add a comment |
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4 Answers
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4 Answers
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I think an aspect of this that @Wilson is missing is that a dog "lifting its leg" is usually used as a euphemism for a male dog urinating [on something].
In my experience in this 'non literal' context, it takes the same preposition logically as 'urinate' would take.
The dog urinated on the fire hydrant.
The dog lifted his leg on the fire hydrant.
When I read the example "The dog lifted its hind leg onto the fire hydrant" it seemed very strange to me. It sounded like the dog literally lifted his leg and placed it on top of the hydrant.
"Lifted his leg towards" sounds like the dog is saluting the fire hydrant.
So, to me, as someone whose male dog spends a lot of time lifting his leg on things in my company, "to lift his leg on" is the most natural choice.
1
Let's see if this joke flies. Damn, fred2, doesn't your dog just pee? I agree about the placement thing. [guffaw]. You're a born comedian what with the lifting and saluting. :)
– Lambie
6 hours ago
add a comment |
I think an aspect of this that @Wilson is missing is that a dog "lifting its leg" is usually used as a euphemism for a male dog urinating [on something].
In my experience in this 'non literal' context, it takes the same preposition logically as 'urinate' would take.
The dog urinated on the fire hydrant.
The dog lifted his leg on the fire hydrant.
When I read the example "The dog lifted its hind leg onto the fire hydrant" it seemed very strange to me. It sounded like the dog literally lifted his leg and placed it on top of the hydrant.
"Lifted his leg towards" sounds like the dog is saluting the fire hydrant.
So, to me, as someone whose male dog spends a lot of time lifting his leg on things in my company, "to lift his leg on" is the most natural choice.
1
Let's see if this joke flies. Damn, fred2, doesn't your dog just pee? I agree about the placement thing. [guffaw]. You're a born comedian what with the lifting and saluting. :)
– Lambie
6 hours ago
add a comment |
I think an aspect of this that @Wilson is missing is that a dog "lifting its leg" is usually used as a euphemism for a male dog urinating [on something].
In my experience in this 'non literal' context, it takes the same preposition logically as 'urinate' would take.
The dog urinated on the fire hydrant.
The dog lifted his leg on the fire hydrant.
When I read the example "The dog lifted its hind leg onto the fire hydrant" it seemed very strange to me. It sounded like the dog literally lifted his leg and placed it on top of the hydrant.
"Lifted his leg towards" sounds like the dog is saluting the fire hydrant.
So, to me, as someone whose male dog spends a lot of time lifting his leg on things in my company, "to lift his leg on" is the most natural choice.
I think an aspect of this that @Wilson is missing is that a dog "lifting its leg" is usually used as a euphemism for a male dog urinating [on something].
In my experience in this 'non literal' context, it takes the same preposition logically as 'urinate' would take.
The dog urinated on the fire hydrant.
The dog lifted his leg on the fire hydrant.
When I read the example "The dog lifted its hind leg onto the fire hydrant" it seemed very strange to me. It sounded like the dog literally lifted his leg and placed it on top of the hydrant.
"Lifted his leg towards" sounds like the dog is saluting the fire hydrant.
So, to me, as someone whose male dog spends a lot of time lifting his leg on things in my company, "to lift his leg on" is the most natural choice.
answered 7 hours ago
fred2fred2
3,815724
3,815724
1
Let's see if this joke flies. Damn, fred2, doesn't your dog just pee? I agree about the placement thing. [guffaw]. You're a born comedian what with the lifting and saluting. :)
– Lambie
6 hours ago
add a comment |
1
Let's see if this joke flies. Damn, fred2, doesn't your dog just pee? I agree about the placement thing. [guffaw]. You're a born comedian what with the lifting and saluting. :)
– Lambie
6 hours ago
1
1
Let's see if this joke flies. Damn, fred2, doesn't your dog just pee? I agree about the placement thing. [guffaw]. You're a born comedian what with the lifting and saluting. :)
– Lambie
6 hours ago
Let's see if this joke flies. Damn, fred2, doesn't your dog just pee? I agree about the placement thing. [guffaw]. You're a born comedian what with the lifting and saluting. :)
– Lambie
6 hours ago
add a comment |
"On" doesn't really work here, but "onto" does. Still, they really don't have the same meaning.
The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant.
The leg is now nearer to the fire hydrant than before, or nearer than the other parts of the dog. This is what dogs usually do when they want to mark their territory by leaving their smells behind.
The dog lifted its hind leg onto fire hydrant.
The leg is now resting on the fire hydrant. The dog is possibly standing with three legs on the pavement and one leg somehow on top of the fire hydrant.
"The dog lifted its hind leg towards onto fire hydrant." does not make sense as written, did you mean "The dog lifted its hind leg onto fire hydrant."
– firedraco
10 hours ago
@firedraco You are absolutely right; that was a brainfart. Fixed.
– Wilson
10 hours ago
Any other way of saying "The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant"?
– tefisjb
9 hours ago
@tefisjb I'm sure there are. See if you can think of one. What you come up with will completely depend on what you want to say.
– Wilson
9 hours ago
lifted its hind leg at?
– tefisjb
9 hours ago
|
show 3 more comments
"On" doesn't really work here, but "onto" does. Still, they really don't have the same meaning.
The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant.
The leg is now nearer to the fire hydrant than before, or nearer than the other parts of the dog. This is what dogs usually do when they want to mark their territory by leaving their smells behind.
The dog lifted its hind leg onto fire hydrant.
The leg is now resting on the fire hydrant. The dog is possibly standing with three legs on the pavement and one leg somehow on top of the fire hydrant.
"The dog lifted its hind leg towards onto fire hydrant." does not make sense as written, did you mean "The dog lifted its hind leg onto fire hydrant."
– firedraco
10 hours ago
@firedraco You are absolutely right; that was a brainfart. Fixed.
– Wilson
10 hours ago
Any other way of saying "The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant"?
– tefisjb
9 hours ago
@tefisjb I'm sure there are. See if you can think of one. What you come up with will completely depend on what you want to say.
– Wilson
9 hours ago
lifted its hind leg at?
– tefisjb
9 hours ago
|
show 3 more comments
"On" doesn't really work here, but "onto" does. Still, they really don't have the same meaning.
The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant.
The leg is now nearer to the fire hydrant than before, or nearer than the other parts of the dog. This is what dogs usually do when they want to mark their territory by leaving their smells behind.
The dog lifted its hind leg onto fire hydrant.
The leg is now resting on the fire hydrant. The dog is possibly standing with three legs on the pavement and one leg somehow on top of the fire hydrant.
"On" doesn't really work here, but "onto" does. Still, they really don't have the same meaning.
The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant.
The leg is now nearer to the fire hydrant than before, or nearer than the other parts of the dog. This is what dogs usually do when they want to mark their territory by leaving their smells behind.
The dog lifted its hind leg onto fire hydrant.
The leg is now resting on the fire hydrant. The dog is possibly standing with three legs on the pavement and one leg somehow on top of the fire hydrant.
edited 10 hours ago
answered 10 hours ago
WilsonWilson
718212
718212
"The dog lifted its hind leg towards onto fire hydrant." does not make sense as written, did you mean "The dog lifted its hind leg onto fire hydrant."
– firedraco
10 hours ago
@firedraco You are absolutely right; that was a brainfart. Fixed.
– Wilson
10 hours ago
Any other way of saying "The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant"?
– tefisjb
9 hours ago
@tefisjb I'm sure there are. See if you can think of one. What you come up with will completely depend on what you want to say.
– Wilson
9 hours ago
lifted its hind leg at?
– tefisjb
9 hours ago
|
show 3 more comments
"The dog lifted its hind leg towards onto fire hydrant." does not make sense as written, did you mean "The dog lifted its hind leg onto fire hydrant."
– firedraco
10 hours ago
@firedraco You are absolutely right; that was a brainfart. Fixed.
– Wilson
10 hours ago
Any other way of saying "The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant"?
– tefisjb
9 hours ago
@tefisjb I'm sure there are. See if you can think of one. What you come up with will completely depend on what you want to say.
– Wilson
9 hours ago
lifted its hind leg at?
– tefisjb
9 hours ago
"The dog lifted its hind leg towards onto fire hydrant." does not make sense as written, did you mean "The dog lifted its hind leg onto fire hydrant."
– firedraco
10 hours ago
"The dog lifted its hind leg towards onto fire hydrant." does not make sense as written, did you mean "The dog lifted its hind leg onto fire hydrant."
– firedraco
10 hours ago
@firedraco You are absolutely right; that was a brainfart. Fixed.
– Wilson
10 hours ago
@firedraco You are absolutely right; that was a brainfart. Fixed.
– Wilson
10 hours ago
Any other way of saying "The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant"?
– tefisjb
9 hours ago
Any other way of saying "The dog lifted its hind leg towards the fire hydrant"?
– tefisjb
9 hours ago
@tefisjb I'm sure there are. See if you can think of one. What you come up with will completely depend on what you want to say.
– Wilson
9 hours ago
@tefisjb I'm sure there are. See if you can think of one. What you come up with will completely depend on what you want to say.
– Wilson
9 hours ago
lifted its hind leg at?
– tefisjb
9 hours ago
lifted its hind leg at?
– tefisjb
9 hours ago
|
show 3 more comments
At is for places:
The dog lifted his hind leg at the fire hydrant or when he got to the fire hydrant.
On and in do not work here.
Dogs generally just aim at the hydrant. They aim at the fire hydrant and hit the side of it, not the top. So on is out. Unless you have a really big dog.
So lifted at can be understood as aiming and peeing. Or it can mean that is the place where he lifted his hind leg.
Like: We stopped at the house for a cup of tea. :)
add a comment |
At is for places:
The dog lifted his hind leg at the fire hydrant or when he got to the fire hydrant.
On and in do not work here.
Dogs generally just aim at the hydrant. They aim at the fire hydrant and hit the side of it, not the top. So on is out. Unless you have a really big dog.
So lifted at can be understood as aiming and peeing. Or it can mean that is the place where he lifted his hind leg.
Like: We stopped at the house for a cup of tea. :)
add a comment |
At is for places:
The dog lifted his hind leg at the fire hydrant or when he got to the fire hydrant.
On and in do not work here.
Dogs generally just aim at the hydrant. They aim at the fire hydrant and hit the side of it, not the top. So on is out. Unless you have a really big dog.
So lifted at can be understood as aiming and peeing. Or it can mean that is the place where he lifted his hind leg.
Like: We stopped at the house for a cup of tea. :)
At is for places:
The dog lifted his hind leg at the fire hydrant or when he got to the fire hydrant.
On and in do not work here.
Dogs generally just aim at the hydrant. They aim at the fire hydrant and hit the side of it, not the top. So on is out. Unless you have a really big dog.
So lifted at can be understood as aiming and peeing. Or it can mean that is the place where he lifted his hind leg.
Like: We stopped at the house for a cup of tea. :)
edited 6 hours ago
answered 6 hours ago
LambieLambie
16.6k1438
16.6k1438
add a comment |
add a comment |
Looking for examples, I came across
The dog lifted its leg against the lamp post.
At any rate, it is an example from a reliable source.
And here's the example of using the preposition on in the context of a male dog preparing to pee.
As a side note, "hind" seems to be redundant in such a situation)
add a comment |
Looking for examples, I came across
The dog lifted its leg against the lamp post.
At any rate, it is an example from a reliable source.
And here's the example of using the preposition on in the context of a male dog preparing to pee.
As a side note, "hind" seems to be redundant in such a situation)
add a comment |
Looking for examples, I came across
The dog lifted its leg against the lamp post.
At any rate, it is an example from a reliable source.
And here's the example of using the preposition on in the context of a male dog preparing to pee.
As a side note, "hind" seems to be redundant in such a situation)
Looking for examples, I came across
The dog lifted its leg against the lamp post.
At any rate, it is an example from a reliable source.
And here's the example of using the preposition on in the context of a male dog preparing to pee.
As a side note, "hind" seems to be redundant in such a situation)
edited 5 hours ago
answered 5 hours ago
RompeyRompey
6,56522365
6,56522365
add a comment |
add a comment |
tefisjb is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
tefisjb is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
tefisjb is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
tefisjb is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Are you using lift a hind leg as a euphemism for pee? Or did he pee after that? (Seriously) speaking. [note for readers: I mean this seriously, and am not being sarcastic]
– Lambie
6 hours ago