Beware of the dog (also rendered as Beware of dog) is a warning sign posted at the entrance to a building or other private area indicating that a dangerous dog is within. Such signs may be placed to deter burglary even if there is no dog, or if the dog is not actually a competent guard dog.[1][2]
Philippians 3:2 is translated as "beware of the dogs" or "beware of dogs" in the King James Bible and many other editions.[5] For example:
Beware of dogs, beware of evil workers, beware of the concision.
This is often interpreted as a euphemism, bad people having been described as dogs in a number of previous biblical passages.[6] Nonetheless, the yard signs are sometimes alluded to in reference to the passage.[7][8] The use of such signs in the Roman world may have influenced the author of the passage,[9] and conversely the passage may have influenced the wording of the more modern yard signs.[10]
Under English law, placing such a sign does not relieve the owner of responsibility for any harm which may come to people attacked by the dog.[11][12] Where a company employs the services of a guard dog, Section 1(3) of the Guard Dogs Act 1975 requires "a notice containing a warning that a guard dog is present is clearly exhibited at each entrance to the premises."[13] In many cases, security signs integrate both CCTV warnings and Guard Dog warnings into the same signage.[14]
^R Wright, RH Logie (1988), "How young house burglars choose targets", The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice, 27 (2): 92–104, doi:10.1111/j.1468-2311.1988.tb00608.x
^C Wilkinson (1998), "Deconstructing the fort", Journal of Australian Studies