Cocker in a sentence as a noun

They don't strictly need you to understand any more than they need cocker spaniels to.

Many younger devs are as naive as cocker spaniel pups and will easily buy any corporate propaganda.

>> In his free time, he enjoys running and skateboarding, playing with his cocker, ...Ermmmmm wouldn't they want to expand that into cocker spaniel...lol.

The vet told us that the tan-colored cocker spaniels were especially prone to problems, as their light color was a result of very close breeding.

"I moved to Ireland for the food not the potato stew, but the 6m people on land that supported 8m before the age of oil. I moved here for the culture you couldnt get a fascism going here with two Hitlers, four Maos and a cocker-spaniel.

Cocker in a sentence as a verb

We had a cocker when I was in college that, at about age 8, became aggressive toward my mom and brother, biting them both on the neck hard enough to draw blood.

Avoid breeds that have been overbred as show dogs - the American cocker spaniel was ruined by this in the 70s and 80s and still hasn't recovered, though the British cocker is still good.

In his free time, he enjoys running and skateboarding, playing with his cocker, as well as reading in science, literature, philosophy, and history.

I'll be the first to agree many programmers are naive as cocker-spaniels and only think of the technicalities and never of the real world -- sadly that's true enough.

Also, I feel like I've noticed adolescent and mischevious behavior in some of our dogs well into the 2-3 age range on occasionThis behavior mainly noted for cocker spaniels and Korean jindos

Cocker definitions

noun

a small breed with wavy silky hair; originally developed in England

verb

treat with excessive indulgence; "grandparents often pamper the children"; "Let's not mollycoddle our students!"

See also: pamper featherbed cosset baby coddle mollycoddle spoil indulge