If you got your dog from a breeder, ask them. If you got them from a shelter, probably not.
You can't. The only way to get papers for the puppies would be if both parents had papers.
You must have papers for both the Mother and Father of the dog. Without papers, there is no way to prove without a shadow of a doubt that the breed is purebred or not.
A dog has to have dog food, water, vet papers, adoption papers, a bed, a collar and leash, some toys and love.
first i would say that you need to check your papers. if they are just state ownership papers that doesnt mean your dog is a chihuahua. if you have akc (american kennel club) papers for a purebred chi then it is a chihuahua. second your dog might possibly be a mix breed. third nonetheless 18 pounds is way too much for a chi. unless it is indeed a mix. find out from whoever you got your dog from if there is any chance of it being a mix breed dog and, if it is truley only chihuahua, it needs to go on a diet.
You really shouldn't. A purebred dog should definitely have papers.
Try searching for AKc or CKC registration sites. They may be able to find out who bred your dog and also get you papers.
Advertise in papers, online or mags. Depends on your purpose.
technically, theres.
Even if the dog had papers, that's no guarantee of quality "confirmation". Papers are a registration of a dog's linage, that proves it's parents were also registered. Nothing more. As to how much a Standard Poodle without papers is worth, how much do you love it? That is a dog's true worth.
Assuming you mean the dog breed 'Bichon Frise' - the simple answer is, you can't ! Pedigree papers contain genealogical information such as the Sire & Dam of the puppy (and at least three previous generations). They also list the registered owner(s) of the parent dogs. Without the pedigree papers - there is no way of tracing the dog's bloodline, and if you were to breed your dog, you would not be able to legally sell any puppies as pedigrees. Basically, unless you can get the certification from the breeder - your dog is 'just another dog' !
If you can find some grass to cut or walk a neighbor's dog
If the dog is registered, the breeder's name (and/or the name of the current owner of record) can be found with the dog's registered name or registration number. Sometimes it can even be found with part of the dog's registered name, especially if the part you know is the kennel name. If the papers were puppy papers and the dog was not yet registered, but you know the name of the dam (mother dog) then the breeder is the owner of the dam and you can find them that way. If they were puppy papers and you don't have any information on the pup that would identify them (litter number, breeder, sire/dam name), then you're out of luck. The best you can do is spay or neuter the pup and get it an indefinite listing privilege which will permit you to participate in various AKC sports, but not in conformation and not breeding.