Most mice dont like 2 be dirty so they groom themselfs about twice a day.
For the not so clean mouse a little help may be needed.
When i first had my mouse i brushed it with my little sisters barbie doll brush as it was the right size however i do not advice u do dat else your sister will get pretty angry.
So all i did was went in2 a pet shop and they gave me a small brush not with plastic brissals but brissals like a paintbrush hope i could help luv !!!*****!!!
The brush in "Of Mice and Men" is described as long-handled, like an old broom. It has stiff bristles and is used to groom the horses on the ranch.
mice have yellow teeth because they eat a lot of cheese and they cant brush.
so would we if we didnt brush our teeth
In Chapter 5 of "Of Mice and Men" by John Steinbeck, Lennie is hiding in the brush by the Salinas River after accidentally killing Curley's wife.
After accidentally killing Curley's wife in "Of Mice and Men," Lennie flees to a nearby hiding spot in the brush by the Salinas River where George had instructed him to go if he ever got into trouble.
The author is highlighting the tension and foreboding in the scene, suggesting something disturbing or dangerous is approaching the characters. The sound of crashing in the brush serves as a metaphor for the disruption and chaos that will soon enter the characters' lives.
In "Of Mice and Men," George tells Lennie to go hide in the brush in Chapter 1, on page 15. This happens after Lennie panics and holds on too tight to a woman's dress, prompting George to advise him to hide if anything goes wrong.
It's important because it's at the very beginning and the very end of the novel. The brush is a metaphor for how everyone in the great depression in America at that time went round in circles, doing the same thing every day. Having the brush at both ends of the novel shows the audience George and Lennie's dream is only a fantasy to keep them going, as they end up in the same place as they were at the beginning - they've made no progress.
The possessive form of "mice" is "mice's."
Brush, brush, brush brush. And brush some more.
The future tense of "brush" is "will brush".
House Mice