Dog and bone is cockney rhyming slang for phone (telephone)
Food is the direct object. This sentence does not have an indirect object. The D.O. answers the question "the dog ate what?" An indirect object would answer the question "for whom / to whom / for what?" as in "I gave the dog a bone." I gave what? A bone (D.O.) I gave the bone to whom? The dog (I.O.)
It depends. If you use it as a noun, its a game website for kids. If it is used as a verb, its a swear that is the British swear for girl dog. (The British "b-word") It is in English to inappropriately touch someone against their will.
transitive
Knick knack paddy whack give a dog a bone is an old nursery rhyme. Some people also refer to it as a children's song.
The word 'bone' is a common noun; a word for any bone of any person or animal.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Dr. Bone & the Hepcats, New Orleans Jazz bandBone Regency, South Sulawesi Province of IndonesiaBone Street, Gainesville, TX or West Bone Street, Bethel, OH"Bone", limited edition comic book series by Jeff Smith"Bones: A Forensic Detective's Casebook" by Dr. Douglas Ubelaker and Henry Scammell
It means your happy just like a 'dog with a bone' to chew on.
'Phone. Dog and bone. Blower.
The "dog and bone" is rhyming slang for "phone". Practical application: "Will ya shuddup, I'm on the dog and bone."
It means he's on the telephone. In this context - 'dog and bone' is Cockney rhyming sland for a telephone.
The dog see's a reflection of him with the bone and thinks it is another dog with another bone.
The Dog and the Bone is one of Aesop's fables
A patient dog eat the fattest bone
A dog fetching a bone is a fine example of a treat. (for the dog)
Given the Dog a Bone was created in 1980.
Welsh
Clavicle bone
A dog fetching a bone is a fine example of a treat. (for the dog)