: any of various usually small energetic dogs originally used by hunters to dig for small game and engage the quarry underground or drive it out
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Louise, an 18-year-old puggle; Henry, a 13-year-old Chihuahua terrier and Lily, a 1½-year-old chug.—Lisa Boone, Los Angeles Times, 23 Jan. 2026 Being allowed to live with his loyal Shih Tzu terrier Lala was helping.—Stephen Hobbs, Sacbee.com, 23 Jan. 2026 Our multiple interviews over three weeks at that time were conducted on his porch stoop with his beloved 17-year-old Chihuahua-terrier dog Loki in arms, and neighbors saying hi like actual neighbors, not autograph hounds.—Steve Garbarino, HollywoodReporter, 22 Jan. 2026 Eight contestants and Erika, a skinny producer with the look of a furious terrier glaring at them from a handbag.—Dalton Ross, Entertainment Weekly, 16 Jan. 2026 See All Example Sentences for terrier
Word History
Etymology
Middle English terryer, terrer, from Anglo-French (chen) terrer, literally, earth dog, from terre earth, from Latin terra
: any of various usually small energetic dogs originally used by hunters to drive game animals from their holes
Etymology
Middle English terryer "a small dog used for hunting burrowing animals," from early French (chen) terrer, literally "earth dog," from terre "earth," derived from Latin terra (same meaning)
Word Origin
Today most terriers are kept as pets. However, there was a time when the dogs were widely used for hunting. Terriers are usually small dogs with short legs, and they were used to dig game animals such as foxes, badgers, and weasels out of their holes. The dogs were also trained to go into a hole after a game animal and drive it out. The French name for these dogs was chen terrer, meaning "earth dog." English borrowed only the word terrier, which can be traced back to Latin terra, meaning "earth."