To Get a dog to obey you. Spend time with him/her.
And once he knows the command and won't do it make sure that you get what you want. He has to obey you. You have to make him do what you want. You need to be firm and understanding.
Some dogs also need a firm voice ( not a gentle one or harsh)
Every dog is unique and different.
The best way to train a dog is with consistent and repetitive training. Make time every day to work with your dog. Train one command at a time. Once the dog gets one command learned, then go on to the next one but remembering to reinforce the previous one/s. Use the same word for each command: if you mean stay, use stay not wait or hold on. Practice means perfect ... practice, practice, practice!
If you are training your dog, always have a treat; they will almost always listen to you if they get food afterwards. If that doesn't work, try your dog's favorite toy.
Yes, you can use the word 'Obey' in a sentenceHere's some examples.1.) She had to teach her dog to obey commands.2.) I had to obey my mother when she asked me to get the groceries from the car so I wouldn't be punished.
A dog will learn its name by you saying it repeatedly by that name. Just the name is all that is required for it to know by the sound of that name. It will not know that its name is say "Spot". But by the sound Spot makes it will obey and come to you. Animals obey by tone. You can swear at a dog in a kindly tone and it will wag its tail. Or you can say kind words with an angry tone and the dog will cower.
No dog inherantly knows how to obey. It takes training and patience. I'd recommend finding a reputable trainer in your area with experience with JRTs that can help you train him.
because he wants you to be a mature adult for the rest of your life and obey him like a dog.
The verb is merely, obey. I obey, you obey, he, she, it obeys. One may be obedient to someone, but one does not "obey to" someone.
Obey is a verb. Obey means "to do as told".Example:Soldiers should obey orders.
Obey is present tense. I/We/You/They obey He/She/It obeys
No. Nothing can train a dog in minutes. You might teach a smart dog the sit command in minutes, for example, but it won't obey you in a chaotic situation after minutes, nor will it perform the command flawlessly the next day/week. Truly training a dog is repetitive stuff. Three times a day, 15 minutes a day. Teaching them the command is the easy part. But a trained dog will obey under any circumstance, and that will take more than a few minutes.
There is dis obey the prefix here is dis because it comes right before obey. You can use Re obey because you can obey someone another time for the same thing maybe. But everybody knows that you can use dis obey and maybe re obey Onother person: Prefixes can be dis-obey
Yes, obey the laws and obey them well.
Obey Kelly
You go do you Lady Grey Quest (Not sure what its called look it up) And at the end where he tells you to leave obey him and leave upstairs then outside behind the house there is a stray dog (the breed is different) and you need to praise the dog and play fetch with the dog. Then the dog will follow you, then you can interact with the dog as the same as the other dog. Now you have two dogs, your welcome :)