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Pembroke Welsh Corgi's Cardigan Welsh Corgi's Scottish Terriers Bull Terriers Collies There are many others but it really depends on the attitude or tempermant of the dog. Or even sometimes gender
They don't, Pembroke Welsh Corgi's are born with out tails, if you see a corgi with a tail, you are looking at a Cardigan Welsh Corgi. They have big bushy tails, and Pembroke's have tails but there tails are small invisible nubs.
Most creatures like snow.
welsh springer spaniel looks a bit like an English springer spaniel but tends to be lighter in colour :)
no only if you hurt them and like all dogs they can be food aggressive to other dogs
I'm Not exactly sure, but the closest i can get is the skye terrier. The Skye Terrier has short legs like the welsh corgi, unlike the dog in Karate Dog.
There as not been a miniature GSD produced but there is a rare genetic disorder that makes some GSD's a 'dwarf' size with tiny legs and long bodies. Almost like a Cardigan Corgi. These dogs are not desirable and they usually die of a younger age.
Such a cardigan can be bought from a store selling cardigans.
"I like your cardigan" = ha-kardeegahn motseh khen beh-einai (הקרדיגן מוצא חן בעיניי)
It could be 'cardi' that is short for 'cardigan'. A cardigan is a woolen jumper that has buttons down it so you can undo it. It is like a jacket. 'Cardi' is a shortened form of cardigan
yes she does like corgis
awsomeThe word "Corgi" is either from the Welsh "cor" (dwarf) and "ci" (dog). The "ci" becoming "gi" by normal mutation resulting in corgi. Another interpretation is that of "cur dog" or "Cur". This interpretation can be dated back to one of the earliest dictionaries, to Wyllam Salesbury's "A Dictionary in Englyshe and Weslhe" London, 1574, where there is a reference to the "Korgi ne gostoc", that is, Corgi or curre dogge. (The use of the K rather than the C at that time was perfectly proper and eventually the K was no longer used interchangeably with the C.) The connection of the word "Corgi" with "Cur" has considerable historical support as there are many references to Corgwn (plural of Corgi - pronounced Corg'n, sound out like oxen) in many a cywydd (a song of praise) in the 14th and 15th centuries.