catflap


Also found in: Wikipedia.

catflap

n
flap at the bottom of a door that a cat can push to get in or out
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
The 13ft by 11.5ft cage is accessed through a catflap and features a number of ramps and frames which enables the pets to climb to the top.
I never stood outside their houses but I had a friend who got stuck in Mark Owen's catflap."
They peck at the back door and it won't be long before they find how to use the catflap."
Sarah Foley realised there was something seriously wrong with two-year-old Obi when he appeared terrified as he sped through the catflap of their home in Halfpenny Lane, off Walsall Road, Lichfield.
She also described their recent album "Telltale Signs" as emotionally heavier compared to "Catflap.
The close friends worked together on the sitcom and Filthy Rich & Catflap.
"Still, good to see Groveller Gove and Oozy Osborne and his yappy mutt Lola kicked through the catflap.
Not the finish, although that was brilliant, a well-spotted shot squeezed through a catflap.
The firm's online booking site is now open, but when the catflap springs open at 10am on opening day the first 25 'drop-in' customers get in for free.
George's other talents include eating slices of cucumber and using the bathroom window instead of the catflap thank you very much.
After this, their careers continued to flourish - often as they worked together, not least in Filthy, Rich & Catflap, which was written by Ben Elton and also starred fellow Young One Nigel Planer, and the selfpenned Bottom (1991-1995).