It's a idiom meaning you're following the wrong line of investigation or reasoning and won't find anything. It basically means the current effort is a dead end and needs to be reviewed. The visualization is a dog that was chasing something and is barking up a tree thinking his quarry is up there when it's really elsewhere.
On the tree, there is a T on it.
"King Kong ring wrong!"
A cactus is a plant that flowers not a tree. Most plants have flowers you can't say a cactus is a flower.
To be ethical is to act in accordance with standards of right and wrong; to do the right thing at all times. To be unethical is not to act according to standards of right and wrong, but instead according to another standard, say, that of only acting for one's own benefit. And if you have to kill babies to get that benefit, so be it.
The Crips call each other ''Cuzz'' & they also call each other ''Loc''. They refer to each other as ''Cuzz'' because they are accepting all Crips as their family, and they refer to each other as ''Loc'' cause it stands for ''Love Of Crips''.
Making a mistake or a false assumption in something you are trying to achieve.If you're barking up the wrong tree, you're looking for something in the wrong place or going about something in the wrong way.it means she has placed the source of her dissatisfaction on the wrong person...a person that possessed no fault in the current grievanceThe phrase means to discuss something completely different from the subject in hand or to be confused as to the expected responseIf you are a dog, and you are chasing a squirrel or other tree-climbing animal, you follow them to the tree and bark at them. If you bark up the wrong tree, you are barking at nothing, so the idiom means you are on the wrong track; you are making a fuss at the wrong person or over the wrong thing.You are barking up the wrong tree ... when you have come to the wrong conclusion. You need to look at the situation and look at other options...You hear people say that someone involved in a misdirected enterprise is "barking up the wrong tree."This surely arises from the days when it was common to hunt with a dog. The dog would "tree a squirrel" or raccoon or whatever and bark energetically looking up from the base of the tree. It is a common enough occurrence now that dogs chase squirrels or cats or whatever and then sit at the base of a tree barking. But, in a forest, the squirrel or raccoon can change trees and the dog will still focus on the tree where the dog thinks the squirrel was last seen and so remain, "barking up the wrong tree."The idiom implies the person "barking up the wrong tree" is taking action in a direction that is completely wrong to achieve a goal. "If he thinks he is going to get the promotion by wearing a new suit, he is barking up the wrong tree."Misguided assumption, on the wrong track, wrong course of action
Making a mistake or a false assumption in something you are trying to achieve.If you're barking up the wrong tree, you're looking for something in the wrong place or going about something in the wrong way.it means she has placed the source of her dissatisfaction on the wrong person...a person that possessed no fault in the current grievanceThe phrase means to discuss something completely different from the subject in hand or to be confused as to the expected responseIf you are a dog, and you are chasing a squirrel or other tree-climbing animal, you follow them to the tree and bark at them. If you bark up the wrong tree, you are barking at nothing, so the idiom means you are on the wrong track; you are making a fuss at the wrong person or over the wrong thing.You are barking up the wrong tree ... when you have come to the wrong conclusion. You need to look at the situation and look at other options...You hear people say that someone involved in a misdirected enterprise is "barking up the wrong tree."This surely arises from the days when it was common to hunt with a dog. The dog would "tree a squirrel" or raccoon or whatever and bark energetically looking up from the base of the tree. It is a common enough occurrence now that dogs chase squirrels or cats or whatever and then sit at the base of a tree barking. But, in a forest, the squirrel or raccoon can change trees and the dog will still focus on the tree where the dog thinks the squirrel was last seen and so remain, "barking up the wrong tree."The idiom implies the person "barking up the wrong tree" is taking action in a direction that is completely wrong to achieve a goal. "If he thinks he is going to get the promotion by wearing a new suit, he is barking up the wrong tree."Misguided assumption, on the wrong track, wrong course of action
Well sometimes your dog can say different things. It just because he is barking, it does not mean he is saying one thing.
When you say cut and you mean real tree than NO!
CORRECTED: Aloha: Say Nīʻau [n-I ow]. The other answer is completely wrong. haupia
this depends on the meaning of "paper tree" if you mean a tree that will used to make paper kami no tame no ki if you mean a tree made of paper kami de dekitteiru ki
In Kannada, we would say Bogulu ಬೊಗಳು.
You hello by barking just like a dog.
I think you mean a "branch" of a tree. according to google translate, it is called branche (i believe the pronunciation is bran-shay)
I'm not telling! That's mean and wrong!!
kkk
Your grammar.......