Many. It's tail has many vertebrae in it
There isn't an idiom "dog's tail." There are several idioms about dogs and tails, but I'm not sure which one you're thinking of.
its not strait because the was its moving or bent you can tell how it feels
we dont have the dogs bone. buy one from pets mart
well in the early stages in the embryo every one does have a little tail from when we had them thousands of years ago but as we grow we lose that bone so it would not be possible to grow a bone
Skull at one end, tail bone at the other.
NOOOOOOO
A French Bulldog is born with a naturally short tail. Most are one inch or shorter.
Two dogs one bone. Share it.
Dogs do not need there tails to live, but it would make it very hard for one to lose their tail. A dogs' tail main purpose is to balance the dog. They may having trouble walking...but they would still be alive.
Yes, if there are several dogs, they will have one that becomes dominant, making it the leader.
No not at all dogs can have one or without it is possible.
If you're talking about the Kraftmaid brand of cabinetry, it would be Kraftmaid's for the possessive -- since there is only one Kraftmaid brand. ('s shows posession by a singular thing; s' shows possession by more than one thing. For example, if one dog has a bone, the possessive is "dog's bone." If multiple dogs share one bone it's "dogs' bone." And if multiple dogs have many bones, its "dogs' bones." The exception is if the plural is already built into the word that describes the owner -- for example, men or women. The proper plural possessive is "men's shoes" or "women's dresses." )