Most younger kids love dogs. Over all the other animals they want a dog. Also, movies like to show how dogs are loyal and caring.
The sky, or in photographs, are where sun dogs can be seen. More specifically, they can be seen anywhere in the world, but are more prominent in areas with ice and/or low sun. Wikipedia shows photographic evidence of sun dogs in North Dakota, England, and Massachesetts, and written evidence in many locations throughout history.
Dogs were the first animals domesticated by humans, not cats. Archaeological evidence suggests dogs began living alongside humans around 15,000–30,000 years ago, mainly as hunting partners and protectors. So where do cats fit in? Cats came much later, but in a very unique way. • Cats likely domesticated themselves about 9,000–10,000 years ago • This happened when humans started farming and storing grain • Grain attracted rodents • Rodents attracted wild cats • Humans tolerated cats because they controlled pests • Over time, cats stayed—not because they were trained, but because it benefited both sides Unlike dogs, cats were never fully controlled or bred for obedience. They chose proximity, not servitude. Why cats are special in pet history Cats are believed to be: • The first animals kept mainly for companionship and pest control, not labor • One of the earliest animals welcomed inside human homes • The first pets to be associated with spiritual and symbolic meaning (especially in Ancient Egypt) Ancient Egyptians even: • Worshipped cats • Mummified them • Considered harming a cat a serious crime In simple terms • 🐕 Dogs: first domesticated animals (work + companionship) • 🐈 Cats: first semi-independent companions who chose humans Fun takeaway Dogs were adopted. Cats moved in—and never left. if u furthur info click this: pawjoypk/com
They can. I have seen a Shih-Tzu with 9 and a very long Dachsund with 11.
common animals like dogs cats cows snakes . animals that are more likely to be seen.
Because working and gun dogs often injure their tails during work so removing the tail is seen as more humane than leaving it to get broken. Tail docking for cosmetic reasons has been banned in the UK because it is seen as ''cruel and unnecessary''.
I have never heard of such a thing. But I have seen oreos for dogs.
If you are referring to the humping behavior seen in dogs, not related to male-to-female mating, it is honestly not what you think. In dogs and other mammals, it is nothing more than a dominant gesture. Dogs are not perverted, it is simply a strange dog term. "I'm over you, I'm dominant over you," is what it means.
yes i have seen it
Well... Ive seen racist dogs, so i guess that would be stereotyping. -Dali-
No, dogs do not develop freckles as they age. Freckles are a genetic trait found in humans and are not commonly seen in dogs.
yes
like about ten million