Yes, although they are bred to a slightly different breed standard, they are the same breed (unless you are thinking of the American Bulldog which is different). The only real noticeable difference between English and American-born Boxers is that in America most Boxers are cropped and docked for show - which is illegal in England.
Spoiled.....It's the same thing as in English.
Hare = English Rabbit = American English They mean the same thing.
No. An American Bulldog is one breed in itself, thought to have been created by breeding English bulldogs and bull terriers. The Boxer was from Germany, with records going back to the 1880s. Before that their history is more spotty. The ancestors of Boxers were the German Bullenbeisser (a Mastiff type dog also called the Brabant Bullenbeisser), and the English Bulldog. The Brabant Bullenbeisser is accepted as the immediate ancestor of the Boxer. The Brabanter was crossed with the English Bulldog to startthe line that would become the Boxer. In 1894, three Germans by the name of Roberth, Konig, and Hopner decided to work with the breed and enter it in a dog show. This was done in Munich in 1895, and the next year they founded the first Boxer Club.
its pronouns babysitter its the same thing.
Technically, there is no such thing as the American alphabet, but the English language does use the Roman alphabet.
He wears boxer briefs. as they all call boxers and boxer briefs the same thing.
Nothing they are the same thing doing the same job It's an American English thing, they have to try to be different
English has a certen way of things but American has more than one way of saying the same thing EX. American ----> yo,hey,dude,hola,aloha...ect=hello <---- English
Yes. The first is the American English way, and the second is the British way of saying the same thing.
It means the same thing as it does in American or English or any other English speaking country. It means photo, painting and things like that.
Sulphate and sulfate are different spellings of the same chemical compound, which is the conjugate base of sulfuric acid (H2SO4). The spelling with "sulph-" is commonly used in British English, while "sulf-" is more common in American English. Both spellings refer to the same chemical entity.
Is the American stone the same as the English stone?" Of cause its different that's why the American weigh more than us English. My word is to them stop eating cookies.