Doggo Speak
Also known as: DoggoLingo · Doggolingo
Doggo Speak is an internet dialect designed to sound like a dog's inner monologue, built from cute word suffixes, animal onomatopoeia, and deliberately broken grammar. The language grew out of pet-enthusiast communities on Facebook and Reddit in the mid-2010s, peaked around 2017 when Merriam-Webster flagged "doggo" as a word to watch, and spawned a full vocabulary covering dozens of animal species. Its central joke, a circular definition where a pupper is "a small doggo" and a doggo is "a big ol pupper," became one of the most recognizable bits of mid-2010s internet humor.
Overview
Doggo Speak treats dogs as if they could type, imagining canine thoughts in a babytalk register full of invented words and intentionally wobbly grammar2. The vocabulary follows consistent linguistic patterns: nouns take diminutive suffixes like "-o," "-er," and "-ino" (dog becomes doggo, pup becomes pupper, pupper becomes pupperino), verbs use a formulaic "doin me a [noun]" construction, and the word "heckin" works as a universal intensifier replacing "very" or "extremely"3. Eye dialect spellings like "fren" (friend) and "hooman" (human) round out the lexicon3.
Onomatopoeia covers specific dog behaviors. "Bork" stands in for barking, "mlem" describes licking, "blep" refers to a tongue slightly poking out, and "blop" handles droopier facial expressions2. The dialect's most famous bit is its self-referential definition loop: a pupper is "a small doggo" and a doggo is "a big ol pupper"2.
The language took shape across multiple pet-focused internet communities in the early-to-mid 2010s, with no single creator. The Dogspotting Facebook group served as an early incubator, particularly in Australia where adding "-o" to everyday words (arvo, servo, smoko) is already common slang3. On May 22, 2014, the Ding de la Doggo Facebook page launched, sharing dog memes built around the word "doggo" and attracting over 29,000 likes in three years1.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
Doggo Speak follows loose conventions that most people pick up by exposure:
Word conversion: Add "-o" for standard animal nouns (dog → doggo, cat → catto), "-er" for smaller versions (pup → pupper), or "-ino" for extra diminutive emphasis (pupper → pupperino).
Sounds: Match behaviors to onomatopoeia. "Bork" for barking, "mlem" for licking, "blep" for a tongue slightly sticking out.
Verbs: Use "doin me a [noun]" to describe actions. A startling event is "doin me a frighten." An extremely cute dog is "doin me a heckin concern" for the heart.
Intensifiers: "Heckin" replaces "very" or "really." "Heck" stands in for stronger profanity.
Spelling swaps: "Friend" becomes "fren," "human" becomes "hooman," "small" becomes "smol."
The format isn't limited to dogs. People commonly apply Doggo Speak rules to cats, birds ("birbs"), snakes ("sneks"), and other animals.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The /r/meirl "What are aninmals?" chart that helped spread the term was intentionally misspelled, fitting the deliberately imprecise spirit of the whole dialect.
Adding "-o" to words is already standard practice in Australian English (arvo for afternoon, servo for service station), which may explain why Doggo Speak caught on early in Australian internet communities.
Usage of DoggoLingo peaked around 2017, the same year Merriam-Webster took notice.
The dialect's verb structure ("doin me a frighten") resembles creole language formation, building verbs from a simple repeatable formula rather than conjugation.
Derivatives & Variations
Animal variants:
The vocabulary expanded to cover snakes ("snek," "nope rope," "danger noodle"), birds ("birb"), fat birds ("borb"), and fluffy animals ("floof")[3].
WeRateDogs:
The Twitter account (@dog\_rates) became one of the most visible ongoing practitioners, rating dogs above 10/10 and using Doggo Speak vocabulary throughout its posts[1].
Pupper/Doggo copypasta:
The circular definition spawned its own standalone copypasta, including a parody styled after the infamous Unidan "Here's the thing" rant, posted to /r/copypasta in July 2016[1].
Undertale's Doggo:
The 2015 RPG Undertale featured an anthropomorphic boss character named Doggo, coinciding with the term's rise in internet slang[1].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (3)
- 1DoggoLingoencyclopedia
- 2Doggo Speak - Urban Dictionarydictionary
- 3Doggo Speak - Know Your Memeencyclopedia