It's a quote from Hamlet. Hamlet says it at Ophelia's funeral.
William Shakespeare's play The Two Gentlemen of Veronafeatures the comic character Launce and his dog, Crab.
Actually, Shakespeare did have a dog and he named a character in one of his plays after his dog. The dog was called "Titus" and was the source of inspiration for Shakespeare's my violent and worse plays, Titus Andronicus. It is unclear whether Shakespeare hated his dog or not, but he did eat it. Probably, he ate it.
You know, I don't think that we have any historical evidence that Shakespeare actually had a dog. If you'll accept fictional evidence, though, here is a good book called Shakespeare's Dog: http://www.antiqbook.com/boox/cat/900031.shtml Apparently, in this book, the dog's name is Mr. Hooker. Of course, if you believe that, then I might as well tell you... my friend Sheri and I were at this seance the other night, and our host actually channeled Shakespeare. He was shouting "Out, damn'd Spot! out I say" ... so, I'm guessing the dog's name was actually Spot, and this Rooke guy is just making stuff up.
His name was Hooker
dog or maybe a kitten
Experts recommend feeding your dog and cat twice a day
depends on the toy
They do what your dog or cat does: eat, play and sleep.
Nothing ! They have no concept of what 'play' is. They are not like a domesticated dog or cat.
"Sure, what type of sentence are you looking for?"
cat then dog
Their names are just Cat and Dog!
The cat misses the dog. Thinks maybe he'll dig himself out of that hole and come play. They must have been very close.
William Shakespeare's play The Two Gentlemen of Veronafeatures the comic character Launce and his dog, Crab.
If your dog chased your cat away, you should put signs up. Maybe someone in the neighborhood has seen her somewhere. You can also keep your cat and dog separate.
It depends on the dog...my golden retrievers love my cat!
The idea is, "my turn is coming", or "what goes around comes around". The idea is like the idea of the wheel of fortune (the Tarot card, not the TV game) where the guy that is on top today may tomorrow fall, and the guy now on the bottom may rise to the top. Everyone will have their turn at greatness, and mine is coming. The expression is a semi-quotation from Shakespeare's Hamlet, who says "Cat will mew, and dog will have his day"