Dogs are well known as eaters of bizarre items (socks, carpets, Kleenex, etc.) and there are several proposals for this behaviour. Nutritionally, there is no reason for a healthy dog to eat nonfood items, they get no value from them.
"corteza" (as on a tree), "descortezar" = strip of bark "ladrido" (a dog's bark) "ladrar" (to bark) and "barca" (barque, ship)
The dog began to bark at the moon.The bark on the tree was rotting.
a tree-though sometimes it whistles in the wind a sleeping dog
bark = the rough covering on a tree bark = the sound a dog makes
The homograph for "bark" (sound a dog makes) is "bark" (tree covering).
Yes, raccoons may strip tree bark as a part of their natural behavior, often to search for insects or to sharpen their teeth.
The bark from the tree barked like a dog. HAHAHA!
A tree. :L
2 meanings 1) Bark, a sound (eg. A dog barks) 2) Bark on a tree (eg. An oak tree has bark)
The answer is bark a dogs bark and a trees bark looks the same and the same but both means different meanings.
bark
No, the word 'bark' is a verb or a noun.When the noun 'bark' is used to describe another noun (a bark collar for a dog or a bark frame for a photo), it's functioning as an attributive noun (also called a noun adjunct).