A dog’s breakfast. Here’s what it means
Yes, “a dog’s breakfast.” If you had no idea what that meant, you weren’t alone.
Chances are a Brit sent out that alert. It’s British slang that means “a confused mess or mixture,” according to Merriam-Webster.
Back in 1993, readers wondered what the phrase meant when the New York Times published a story with the sentence, “Aides repackaged a dog’s breakfast of White House trade and fiscal policies into an ‘agenda for American renewal.'”
The writer of the sentence explained it like this: “A dog’s breakfast is any kind of smorgasbord prepared, in haste or at random, from life’s castoffs. In this case, it was the chicken bones and half-eaten pizzas of policies that the Administration had proposed earlier and Congress had rejected. . . . Cat people wouldn’t understand, but anyone who has ever walked a dog down an alley would.”
The phrase was traced back to Glasgow, Scotland, in the 1930s.
Basically, the writer of the CNN story thinks Trump’s Middle East policy is a mishmash of leftover and unappetizing ideas. Which, yeah, seems about right.
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