Pedigree cats are a result of many generations of breeding within the same breed. You cannot tell this by looking at a cat, only by recording the generations of cats. Technically a cat is not pedigree if you do not have a record of its family, even if it has been bred true, as you need proof of breed to enter it in a cat show as a pedigree.
Unless you got the cat and pedigree papers from a breeder, it is almost impossible to tell what breed it is. Many breeds and mixed breeds of cats can be black. A breed of a cat cannot be depicted by a single trait alone.
Moggy or Moggie, British informal: a non-pedigree domestic cat Plural: Moggies
The best place to buy a pedigree Burmese kitten in through The Burmese Cat Club or The Burmese Cat Society..just Google these and the clubs page will come up.
I don't think you can really. Maybe there's a signature though.
Moggie or Moggy; British informal: a non-pedigree domestic cat
The official definition for the word moggy is "a cat, esp. one that does not have a pedigree or is otherwise unremarkable."
Ask for a pedigree from the place you got it from.
its good, way better than any pedigree nonsense.
I don't believe so. However, he is a very pretty Red (ginger) Tabby, who most likely is a Domestic Shorthair/moggy.
Go to http://www.penisland.com, and it will tell you what you need to know.
The most popular pedigree breed of cat is the Persian, but the Domestic Shorthair (otherwise known as the Moggy or mixed breed) is much more popular.
When a dog has a pedigree it's bloodline can be traced back many generations in order to be able to tell if the animal has the quality of bloodline that it is claimed to have. It is like a family tree.