DoggoLingo appends various diminutive suffixes "-o", "-er", "-ino" to existing English words (e.g.
dog turns into
doggo,
pup turns into
pupper) as well as DoggoLingo words that have been created (e.g.
pupper turns into
pupperino). DoggoLingo relies heavily upon onomatopoeia: Words such as
mlem or
blep describe the action of a dog sticking out its tongue, or other forms of facial expression. Much like a
creole language, DoggoLingo follows a similar rudimentary style to create its verbs (e.g.
doin me a in place of present participles with the speaker as object, such as
doin me a scare "scaring me") and adjectives (e.g.
heckin in place of degree modifiers such as
extremely).
Heck is frequently used in place of more conventional expletives. In 2023, an analyst from the
Southern Poverty Law Center noted the term
fren has been adopted as a deliberately "innocuous" and "baby talk" self-description by the far-right online, with the word being used as a
backronym for "far-right
ethnonationalist". == Origin ==