First, you need to figure out WHY a horse is being disobedient. Often times, we mistake a horses behavior as disobedience when he is actually trying to tell us something, "Hey I'm in pain," or, "Hey, I'm bored," Or, "I don't understand you." but instead of listening to them, we hit them, smack them around, "discipline" them, but that is not at all what needs to be done, so trust is damaged and the horse will not enjoy being around you.
I or someone else could help you more if you would specify what your horse is doing that you consider "disobeying"
disobiedent
That is the correct spelling of the adjective "disobedient" (insubordinate, defiant).
They can, if the horse is well trained, obedient, and the owners know how to control a horse. It is essential that the owners know how just as much as the horse does though, because if you don't, the horse will become untrained and disobedient when he learns he can get away with it.
No, it is an adjective (a noun, person or animal, can be disobedient). The adverb form is disobediently (done in a disobedient manner).
The disobedient dog was put down as it caused too much hassle for the family.
Disobedient is the adjective form of disobedience.
The dog was so disobedient and naughty, the got him put down.
You are the most disobedient child I have ever met! Good day!
Consequences of being disobedient can vary depending on the situation. It can lead to disciplinary action at school or work, strained relationships with authority figures, and potentially legal ramifications. In more extreme cases, disobedience can result in harm to oneself or others.
In a manner of speaking, yes a horse goes to school. For training they go to a trainer, which is like a horse teacher.
Iron Horse Middle School was created in 1996.
Obedient, accepting, or behaving. Those words mean disobedient.