) Move stealthily or restlessly as or like a hunter:
The tiger began to PROWL along close to the floor, and with it's unsuspecting prey in sight, he pounced! The wolf prowls at the door. Let's prowl about.
Cats prefer to prowl at night.The eagle prowled for road kill.
No.Answer:Although dogs' teeth and digestive systems are set up to be carnivores all dog owners know they are opportunistic omnivorous eaters. They will ear anything that's handy - meat, bone, cheese, fruit, vegetables, bread, cake, ice cream, chocolate, dirty kleenexes, feces.The man dog relationship started when dog ancestors prowled garbage middens (dumps) of prehistoric man looking foe anything edible that was thrown out. Coyotes today continue this tradition.
Prowled is the past tense of the verb prowl.
Last night, she watched as a burglar prowled through a neighbor's back yard so she called the police immediately.
The tiger began to PROWL along close to the floor, and with it's unsuspecting prey in sight, he pounced! The wolf prowls at the door. Let's prowl about.
some well known pirates prowled are Mary Read and Anne Bonney
The lion prowled at the meercat
The hungry wolf prowled the periphery of the herd of bison.
Jackals prowled around cemeteries, so the Ancient Egyptians believed that Anubis watched over the dead.
Last night, she watched as a burglar prowled through a neighbor's back yard so she called the police immediately.
The minotaur, a legendary creature with a man's body and bull's head that prowled a Greek labryinth, probably had a dark brownish head.
Growl, owl, cowl, foul, dowel. That's five. It should be enough.
The guttersnipe prowled through the dimly lit alley, searching for scraps of food to satisfy his hunger.
During WWII; German subs prowled the US east coastline; and Japanese subs prowled the US west coastline. The only difference between the two was Japan's subs launched an airplane and then bombed Brookings Oregon with it. Then another one shelled Santa Barbara California with it's deck gun. Both German & Japanese subs sank US ships off the east and west coastlines.