Advertisement

Advertisement

Komondor

[ kom-uhn-dawr ]

noun

, plural Ko·mon·dors, Ko·mon·dor·ok [kom, -, uh, n-dawr-, uh, k].
  1. one of a Hungarian breed of large dogs having a long, matted, white coat, used for herding sheep and as a watchdog.


komondor

/ ˈkɒmənˌdɔː /

noun

  1. a large powerful dog of an ancient Hungarian breed, originally used for sheep herding. It has a very long white coat that hangs in woolly or matted locks
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Discover More

Word History and Origins

Origin of Komondor1

From Hungarian, dating back to 1930–35, allegedly after a Turkic tribal name
Discover More

Example Sentences

It has great breeds like the Alaskan malamute, the great Dane, the delightfully-entitled Dogue de Bordeaux, and the Komondor, which is the one that looks like a giant ambulatory mop.

Thus, we not only read about Hira, Towne’s famously hirsute, jumbo-sized, Hungarian Komondor, acquired as a guard dog in the wake of the Manson murders, but also Scylla, the Komondor that preceded him but was deemed insufficiently fierce.

There was only one komondor entered, so she was an automatic winner.

I particularly liked a Samoyed named Letty, who was enjoying a nap; a Hungarian Vizsla named Judit, who licked all over my face, and Barry, a komondor, who, if I am being honest, was obscured by so much heavy, ropelike, dreadlock-y hair that it was hard to get a sense of his personality, other than that he did not seem embarrassed to look like a giant industrial mop.

This komondor isn’t even the front-runner.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


K'omokskompromat