It's believed to have started with rhyming slang - "dog's meat" meaning feet.
Dogs, as a slang word for feet, is in question. One member asked that the question be referenced. I can only do so through personal experience. As a 73-year-old woman, I heard the term used often in my yonger days. Always, as I recollect, the term dogs was used to express how your feet felt after a long day of shopping. For example: "Whew, my dogs are barking!" I was around when pointed toe shoes made their appearance in the 50s and perhaps it was those foot killers that inspired women to use that expression. Cockney rhyming slang; Plates (of meat)
no becuase dogs may eat the polish
No, you should never give human medications to your pets. Dogs (and cats) react very differently to human medications and this can sometimes be fatal.
What human ointment can be substuted for panalog ointment.
because dogs need to use them more and dogs are different to humans so their teeth are different.
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Slang affects American children in the same way as it affects all children everywhere. Slang is part of human language, which is always changing and evolving. Every language has slang, just as every language has idiomatic expressions. Children learn how to use the right slang in the same way they learn how to use other words - they hear them used all around them.
No. Human pregnancy tests detect hCG (Human Chorionic Gonadotropin), which is specific to humans and is not present in dogs, pregnant or not.
Yes, Mastiff dogs do have webbed feet, they use them for an extremely good swimming ability. =)
if your dogs feet are muddy just simply try and use a cloth that you never use and wipe his feet.
Writers use slang to make their writing more relatable and engaging to a specific audience. Slang can also add authenticity to dialogue or help establish a certain tone or setting within a story.
Yes but only unscented. E45 is good