File talk:Welcome to dogget 1.1 (Aftershock)

Here’s what the name means
The term ‘dogget’ is an obsolete form of ‘docket.’ The Century Dictionary defines docket thus:


 * 1) In general, a summarized statement; an abridgement or abstract; a brief.
 * 2) A summary of a larger writing; a paper or parchment, or a marginal space, containing the heads of a writing; a digest. Also: a register of judgments, more specifically of money judgments. It can also mean a list of causes in court for trial or hearing, or of the names of the parties who have causes pending (usually made in the order in which the causes are to be called). And it can also mean the copy of a decree in chancery, left with the record and writ clerk, preparatory to enrolment.
 * 3) A bill tied to goods, containing some direction (as the name of the owner or the place to which they are to be sent); also, a ticket attached to goods, specifying their measurement.
 * 4) A shred or piece.
 * 5) A woodman’s bill.

Here’re some younger definitions:

(Unrelated note: people kill, not religion per se. It’s just a utility. I doubt that the author was conscious of that.) --Rottweiler (Woof? Ruff!) 01:07, April 11, 2015 (UTC)