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flop-eared

American  
[flop-eerd] / ˈflɒpˌɪərd /

adjective

  1. having long, drooping ears, as a hound.


Etymology

Origin of flop-eared

First recorded in 1840–50

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

When I met him, flop-eared goats and quarrelsome geese were rooting around on the floor, and the yard was strewn with pieces of dried rawhide that would be turned into chew toys for dogs.

From The New Yorker • Jul. 18, 2016

The beagle hound is a friendly, flop-eared little dog with a tail that wags with the furious regularity of a revving propeller.

From Time Magazine Archive

The champion handicap horse of 1944 is a flop-eared tomboy that her friends call Susie.

From Time Magazine Archive

Hanna-Barbera's Huckleberry Hound, whose flop-eared hero is one of the alltime favorites of American children, last spring won TV's Emmy Award for children's programing.

From Time Magazine Archive

Last Friday he Brought home a flop-eared pup with a drooping tail and an indefinite ancestry, explaining that he had come into possession of the aforementioned animal by the duly delivered purchase-price of thirty-seven cents.

From The Prairie Child by Ward. E. F. (Edmund Franklin)