Yes, a veterinarian is a medical Doctor Who works on animals. However, a veterinarian is not qualified or trained to work on humans. The degree a veterinarian must have to work on animals is a DVM (Doctor of Veterinary Medicine) or a VMD (Veterinary Medical Doctor, given at The University of Pennsylvania).
Yes, veterinarians have the title Dr.
He was a Veterinarian. By the way, Daktari is Swahili for "Doctor."
Nope - the DVM/VMD degree (Doctor of Veterinary Medicine or Veterinary Medical Doctor) is the only degree needed to be a veterinarian.
A doctor that treats animals is called a veterinarian.
In the United States, the degree is Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (DVM) or Veterinary Medical Doctor (VMD, from The University of Pennsylvania).
In the United States, the title of a veterinary degree is Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (DVM) or Veterinary Medical Doctor (VMD).
That is the correct spelling of veterinarian (doctor for animals).
Any veterinarian can provide medical care for a horse, but most horse owners use a veterinarian who works only with horses; this person is called an equine veterinarian.
A veterinarian's professional degree in the United States is a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (DVM) or a Veterinary Medical Doctor (VMD, only for graduates of The University of Pennsylvania).
Veterinarian is a medical term for someone who treats the diseases of animals.
An animal doctor is a veterinarian.
A doctor who treats animals is called a Veterinarian or a Veterinary Doctor
Animal doctor would be one, vet is another (short for veterinarian).