Calpurnia runs to the Radley's house and knocks on the front door shouting to them about the mad dog. This prompts Scout to point out to Jem that Calpurnia is supposed to go around to the back.
Calpurnia warns Atticus about the rabid dog, Tim Johnson, who is wandering down the street in Maycomb. She knows Atticus is a skilled marksman and wants him to be prepared to protect the town from the dangerous animal.
She tells Jem and Scout to go inside and calls Atticus, who later shoots the dog and is revealed to be Maycomb's best shooter.
Mad is just a way of saying that the Dog had "Rabies".
She alerts the neighbors, calls Atticus, and gets the kids indoors.
she warns Atticus Finch at his office.
behaviour of a rabid dog
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," the dog that Atticus Finch shoots is a rabid dog, a mongrel described as "all skin and bone" by the character Calpurnia.
A rabid dog looks very angry and drools at its mouth. It will bite even though it is unprovoked.
Calpurnia informed Atticus about the mad dog, known as Tim Johnson, who was roaming the streets of Maycomb.
No
A rabid dog.
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," the children see Tim Johnson as a dangerous, rabid dog that needs to be put down. Calpurnia's description to Atticus and Miss Maudie is more matter-of-fact, emphasizing the imminent danger and the need for action before the dog harms anyone. Both the children and Calpurnia understand the seriousness of the situation but perceive it from slightly different perspectives.
The day her dad shot the rabid dog.
The rabid dog incident in "To Kill a Mockingbird" occurs in Chapter 10 when Atticus shoots the dog, Tim Johnson, to protect the town from his rabies infection.
yes if you train your dog well it can and will
I don't think there are any. the closest word would possibly be rabid(ex. a rabid dog)
A rabid dog.